Bickman's Study (Uniform)

Cards (25)

  • What was the aim of the Bickman Study?
    To see how uniform affected people's levels of obedience
  • What type of hypothesis was the Bickman study?

    A uniformed guard will have more ability to influence others than the same person in a low-authority uniform.
  • What was the research design in Bickman's study?
    Type of experiment
    Field experiment - takes place in a real-world setting rather than a lab. (+ ecological validity)
  • What was the sample for Bickman's study?

    • 153 people
    • in Brooklyn, New York (cultural bias)
  • Procedure of Bickman's study?
    Variables
    IV: Type of uniform (police officer, milkman, civilian)
    DV: Levels of obedience - measured by how many people obeyed
    Control: Same experimenters, same commands
  • What were the 3 commands given in Bickman's study?

    1. Pick up a bag of litter
    2. Give a dime to someone for a parking meter
    3. Stand at the other side of the pole at the bus stop
  • How did they measure levels of obedience in Bickman's study?

    By how many people obeyed
  • Results of Bickman's study? Percentages
    Guard: 89
    Milkman: 57
    Civilian: 33
  • Research design of experiment 2 of Bickman's study

    Also a field experiment (ecological validity)
  • Sample of Bickman's study (experiment 2)
    48 adult pedestrians
    in Brooklyn, New York again
  • Procedure of experiment 2 Bickman's study? Variables
    IV: Guard, civilian
    Surveillance or no surveillance
    DV: How many people obeyed
    Control: Same experimenters, same commands
  • What was the command given in experiment 2 of Bickman's study?

    Give a dime to someone for their parking meter
  • What was the aim of experiment 2 of Bickman's study?

    To see if surveillance or no surveillance AND uniform after given a command would affect levels of obedience
  • What were the results of Bickman's study experiment 2?

    • Surveillance had no effect on whether the participant obeyed or not.
    • The guard was obeyed more than the civilian.
  • Research design on experiment 3a+b of Bickman's study?

    Questionnaire
  • Sample of experiments 3a+b in Bickman's study?

    3a - 141 college students
    3b - 189 college students
  • Procedure of experiment 3a Bickman's study?

    • 29 hypothetical scenarios (incl. original study scenarios)
    • Whether or not they were perceived as more legitimate based on uniform (guard, milkman, civilian)
  • Results of experiment 3a in Bickman's study?

    In the 3 original scenarios, the guard was not perceived as more legitimate than the other uniforms.
    The participants did not think the experimenters' uniforms made their REQUESTS any more legitimate.
  • Procedure of experiment 3b of Bickman's study?

    • Participants were asked to predict what they would do in one of those scenarios from experiment 1.
    • They were also asked to predict what others would do.
  • Results of experiment 3b in Bickman's study?

    Participants didn't think the guard would have more social power in the scenarios. (compared to other uniforms)
  • Conclusion for experiment 3 of Bickman's study?

    How people think they would behave in a situation is not a good predictor of true behaviour.
  • Conclusion of experiments 1 and 2 of Bickman's study?
    Uniform does have an effect on obedience.
    People are more likely to obey people wearing uniforms as it suggests they are an authority figure.
    • And to a lesser extent, those with less authoritative uniforms (milkman)
  • Conclusion of Bickman's study overall?

    Uniform does have an effect on obedience.
    People are more likely to obey people wearing uniforms as it suggests they are an authority figure.
    • And to a lesser extent, those with less authoritative uniforms (milkman)
    How people think they would behave in a situation is not a good predictor of true behaviour
    The results support situational factors as it shows that level of obedience is affected by the dress of the person giving the order.
  • How do the results of the Bickman's study support the situational factors theory?

    The results of the study show a situational explanation for obedience, as it shows that level of obedience is affected by the dress of the person giving the order.
    This is a situational factor.
  • 3 criticisms of Bickman's study
    1. Cannot be generalised
    • Cultural bias (Brooklyn, New York)
    • Small sample for experiment 2
    • Gender bias - no female confederates
    2. Ethical considerations
    • No informed consent/debrief
    • Could be embarrassed
    3. Unreliable
    • Extraneous variables such as time
    • The orders were culturally relative.