the desire to be liked - when we conform to fit in with the group because we dont want to appear foolish or to be left out
informational social influence (ISI)
the desire to be right - when we conform because we are unsure of the situation so we look to others who we belive may have more information than us
jenness - sweets jar
a jar of sweets was passed round the room for people to look at individually and make an estimate for how many were in the jar
people wrote down their first private guess
then group discussion and group guess took place
then Ps took a second private guess
after the second private guess the guesses became more similar to the group guess
conformity
a type of social influence involving a change in belief or behaviour in order to fit in with a group. the change is in response to real or imagined group pressure
compliance
going along with others in public but not changing opinions / behaviour in private. only a superficial change, behaviour stops once peer pressure from group goes
identification
conforming to opinions / behaviour of a group as there is something about them that we value. identify with them and want to be part of it so changing opinions / behaviour as long as we are with the group
internalisation
a person genuinely accepting group norms, resulting in a privateandpublic change in opinion and behaviour, likely to be permanent because the attitudes have been internalised
sherif - conformity
aimed to demonstrate people conform to group norms when put into an ambiguous situation
lab experiment -autokinetic effect
when tested individually their estimates of how far light moved varied a lot, but when in groups of 3 (2 similar, 1 different guess) the group converged to a common estimate (1 different guess conformed)
shows people will always conform and when in an ambiguous situation people will look to others to guidance and conform when lacking information
asch lines study
50 male american students
line judgement task, one P sat with 6 confederates and always sat 2nd to last
had to say which option was most like the other line shown
correct answer was always obvious, confederates would say the wrong answer
Ps conformed 36.8% of the time, 75% conformed on at least one trial, 25% never conformed
Ps interviewed after and most said they agreed to fit in / avoid ridicule, confirming normative social influence
asch :( a child of its time
perrin and spencer repeated study in 1980 (diverse decade) with 396 students only 1 conformed
asch's study was flawed - made his judgement in 50s which was a time of high conformism as people were afraid of being seen as a communist
BUT... perrin and spencers Ps were all maths and engineering students so their lack of conformity may be due to high confidence levels
asch :( artificial situation
demand characteristics have been claimed
no reason to conform - wasnt a life or death situation it was trivial
group wasnt representative of situations in everyday life , study cannot be generalised
in real life things are more open to interpretation
asch :( limited application
only men were tested
its been suggested women conform more
all Ps from USA - an individualist culture
in collectivist cultures (china, japan) conformity rates are higher than asch claimed
asch :( limited application
williams and sogon disagree - found conformity was higher when people were around friends rather than strangers
perhaps asch was wrong to try to find conformity rates for people - we change our degree of conformity depending on situation on how much we want to impress to group / confidence
asch :( ethical issues
Ps were deceived as they thought study and participants were real
deception is against BPS code of ethics
asch :) task is unambiguous
a definite answer
question is easy, so you know they are conforming
asch :) lab study
could control all variables and establish cause and effect - that majority did cause conformity
variables affecting conformity - group size
conformity increases as group size increases
little change in conformity once group size reaches 4-5 (1 Confederate (C) = 3% conform, 2 C's 13%, 3+ 32%)
4 = optimal group size as conformity does not increase in groups larger than this
variables effecting conformity - non conforming role model
when one other person gave a different answer from the others, conformity dropped
the presence of even 1 confederate that goes against majority can reduce conformity as much as 80%
breaking unanimity of the group is important
variables effecting conformity - difficulty of task
when comparision lines were more similar in length it was harder to judge and conformity increased , reflecting asch's results
when we are uncertain, we look to others for confirmation , more difficult the task, greater conformity
when people are confident they are less likely to conform even when it is a difficult task
variables effecting conformity - giving answers in private
when Ps could write their answers down rather than announce them to the group, conformity dropped