Conformity to social roles - zimbardo

    Cards (35)

    • what was the aim of asch's research? to assess to what extent people will conform to the opinion of others when the answer is clear
    • procedure of asch's: - 123 american men
      - each pps saw 2 lines, line x = standard and line a b c = comparison line and one is the same length as x
      - participant had to say which was the same length
      - tested in groups of 6 - 8, one was genuine pps and the rest were confederates
      - pps was always last but one to answer
    • what were Asch's findings? genuine pps agreed with confederates 36.8% of the time

      25% never conformed

      75% conformed atleast once
    • what was Asch's conclusion? - people have a strong tendency to conform in a group situation even when the answer is clear
      - however 2/3s remained independent suggesting some can resist the pressure to conform
    • what variables did asch investigate? Group size, unanimity, task difficulty
    • how did asch test group size? varied number of confederates from 1 - 15
    • what were asch's findings about group size? curvilinear relationship between group size and conformity
      conformity increased with group size up to a point
      with 3 confederates, conformity increased to 31.6%
    • how did asch test unanimity? He introduced a Confederate who disagreed with the others
    • what did asch find about unanimity? pps conformed less often in the presence of a dissenter

      rate decreased to less than 1/4 of the level it was when majority = unanimous

      helped naieve pps be independent
    • how did asch test task difficulty: increased difficulty of line judging task
    • what did asch find about task difficulty? more difficult = increase in conformity

      unclear what correct answer is (informational social influence)
    • what are the three types of conformity? Internalisation, identification, compliance
    • what is internalisation? - deep type of conformity
      - we take on the majority views as we accept it as correct
      - agree privately and publicly
    • example of internalisation: becoming a vegetarian because you agree with your friends viewpoint
    • what is identification? conforming to the group because we value it
      prepared to change views in order to be part of it
    • example of identification: adopting the same music taste as your friends but when you move away, you revert back to your old music taste
    • what is compliance? - superficial agreement with group
      - going along with it publicly but holding a different view privately
    • example of compliance: pretending you like a film you hate as to not stand out
    • what are the explanations for conformity? Informational Social Influence (ISI) and Normative Social Influence (NSI)
    • what is informative social influence? - who has the better info, you or the rest of the group
      - believing with the majority because we believe its correct
      - likely to happen in situations that are new to the person and where decisions are made quickly
    • example of informational social influence: if you're about to answer in class, but most of the class gives on answer so you accept it as correct
    • what evidence is there to support ISI? - Lucas et al found that participants conformed more when maths problem = difficult
      - so, if we dont understand something ourselves we are more likely to conform
    • what is normative social influence? when we agree with the opinion of the majority because we want to gain social approval and be liked
    • example of NSI: dressing the same as a group of people as you want to fit in
    • what evidence supports NSI? - Asch 1951 interviewed pps and some said they conformed as they felt uncomfortable about giving an answer and were afraid of disapproval
      - this shows that conformity is due to desire not to be rejected by the group disagreeing with them
    • when did Zimbardo conduct his research?

      1970s
    • how did zimbardo get his participants? in the middle of the night, they arrested pps from their own homes
    • who were the participants of zimbardos research? 21 emotionally stable men randomly allocated to roles of prisoners and guards
    • where was zimbardos
      Stanford University
    • in the stanford prison experiment, how were social roles enforced? uniforms (e.g loose smock and cap for prisoners) - de-individuation
      and instructions about behaviour - rather than leaving the study, prisoners applied for parole
    • in the stanford prison experiment, what were the findings relating to social roles? - guards treated prisoners harshly - harassed them e.g night time head counts
      - divide and rule tactics e.g harassed prisoners to remind them of their powerlessness
      -prisoners rebellion failed, prisoners became depressed
      - one went on hunger strike
    • when did the stanford pr: After 6 days of the intended 14
    • conclusions of the stanford prison experiment: - social roles have a strong influence on behaviours e.g brutal guards and submissive prisoners
      - social roles can be very easily adopted (including volunteers such as prison chaplain)
    • give an example of a real life study: Abu Ghraib 2003 - 2004
    • what happened in Abu Ghraib? - US army military personnel committed human rights violations against tragic prisoners
      - they were tortured physically and sexually abused
      - were humiliated
      - some murdered
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