Resistance to social influence

    Cards (24)

    • What does resistance to social influence refer to?
      Ability to withstand pressures to conform
    • What are two important factors contributing to resistance to social influence?
      Social support and locus of control
    • How does social support affect resistance to social influence?
      • Provides shared views or dissent
      • Breaks unanimous majority positions
      • Reduces normative and informational influence
      • Facilitates maintenance of personal beliefs
    • How did Asch's conformity studies demonstrate social support's effect?
      Presence of a dissenting Confederate reduced conformity
    • What was the impact of a disobedient Confederate in Milgram's experiment?
      Obedience levels dropped from 65% to 10%
    • What was the focus of Alre et al.'s 2006 study?
      Social support for pregnant teenagers quitting smoking
    • What did Alre et al.'s study find regarding mentors?
      Mentored participants were less likely to smoke
    • What does Gamson et al.'s 1982 study illustrate about peer influence?
      • Participants resisted unethical tasks
      • 88% disobeyed instructions
      • Peer presence emboldened resistance
    • What was the main finding of Allan and LaVine's 1971 study?
      Dissenting individuals reduced conformity levels
    • How does locus of control affect resistance to social influence?
      Internals resist more than externals
    • Who introduced the concept of locus of control?
      Julian Rotter
    • What characterizes individuals with a high internal locus of control?
      They believe they control their life events
    • What characterizes individuals with a high external locus of control?
      They believe external factors control their lives
    • What does the locus of control continuum represent?
      • Spectrum from internal to external locus
      • Individuals vary in control perception
      • Most fall somewhere in between
    • What did Holland's 1967 study reveal about locus of control and obedience?
      37% internals refused maximum shock, 23% externals
    • What did Shoot's 1975 study find regarding internal locus of control?
      Internals expressed their views more often
    • What limitation did Twal's 2004 research highlight?
      Contradictory evidence on locus of control
    • What does reactance theory suggest about resistance?
      Individuals rebel when choices are restricted
    • What is the summary of resistance to social influence?
      • Involves resisting pressures to conform
      • Influenced by social support and locus of control
      • Research supports the impact of dissenting peers
      • Complex interplay of various factors
    • What factors may influence resistance to social influence?
      • Locus of control
      • Social status
      • Reactance theory
      • Peer influence
    • What research shows a link between locus of control and resistance to social influence?
      Holland (1967) repeated Milgram's study and measured whether people were internal or external loves of control
    • What did Holland (1967) find from his study?
      37% of internals didn't continue to 450 volts and 23% of externals didn't continue to 450 volts
    • What study argued against Hollands findings?
      Twinge (2004) analysed data from obedience studies over a 40 year period.
    • What did Twenge (2004) find?
      He found that people were becoming more resistant to social influence but were also becoming more external