Zimbardo - Conformity to social roles

    Cards (8)

    • How did Zimbardo investigate social roles?
      Mock prison in Stanford university
    • How many participants took part?
      • 21 male student volunteers
      • Selected by psychological testing that showed them to be ‘emotionally stable’
      • Randomly allocated guard or prisoner
    • How were social roles encouraged?
      • UNIFORM - prisoners strip searched, given uniform and number, encouraged de-individualisation. guards had own uniform with handcuffs and mirrored sunglasses
      • INSTRUCTIONS - prisoners told couldn’t leave, had to ask for parole. Guards told they had complete power over prisoners
    • What were the findings of the study?
      • Guards played role enthusiastically, treated prisoners harshly
      • Prisoners rebelled within 2 days, guards retaliated and harassed prisoners
      • Guards behaviour threatened prisoners psychological and physical health
    • How did the guards behaviours threaten the prisoners psychological and physical health?
      • After rebellion prisoners became subdued, anxious and depressed
      • 3 prisoners released early as showed signs of psychological disturbance
      • one went on hunger strike
      • study stopped after 6 days in stead of intended 14
    • What were the conclusions of Zimbardos experiment?
      • Social roles are powerful influences on behaviour, most conformed strongly
      • Guards became brutal, prisoners submissive
    • Strength of the SPE?
      • Control over key variables - emotionally stable ps, random allocation.
      • Roles by chance which increases internal validity
    • Limitations of the SPE?
      • Lacked realism of true prison - Banuazizi and Mohavedi suggested Ps were play acting, their performances reflected stereotypes
      • COUNTERPOINT behaved as if it was real, 90% of conversations were about prison life, suggests role replication
      • Exaggerated power roles - only 1/3 of guards behaved brutally, another third applied rules fairly. rest supported prisoners