group of 6 people- 4 participants and 2 confederates
viewed 36 blue coloured slides of varying intensisites and asked to state whether the slides were blue or green
In one condition confederates said the slides we green in another the confederates were inconsistent and there was a control group with no confederates
Findings
Consistent minority- paticipants gave the same wrong answer in 8.42% trials
Inconsistent minority- agreement fell to 1.25%
Control group- wrong only 0.25% of the time
What is minority influence?
How one person or small group influences the beliefs and behaviours of others.
May just influence one person or the majority/a group of people
How is minority influence different to conformity?
In minority influence, a small group influences the majority, while in conformity, individuals change their beliefs or behaviors to fit in with the majority.
Minority influence leads to internalisation
both public behaviour and private beliefs are changed
what ere the 3 processes that lead to minority influence?
Consistency, commitment and flexibility
What is consistency?
Always going the same thing
Consistency
Means the minority’s view gains more interest
Makes others rethink their own views
what is synchronic consistency?
Everyone saying the same thing
What is diachronic consistency?
People saying the same thing for some time
What is commitment?
Showing deep involvement
Commitment
Helps gain attention
e.g through extreme activities
Must be some risk to the minority to demonstrate commitment to the cause.
Augmentation principle
majority pay even more attention
What is the augmentation principle?
The majority pay even more attention to the minority due to the commitment they show suggesting that it is of great importance
What is flexibility?
Showing willingness to listen to others
Flexibility
The minority should balance consistency and flexibility so they don’t appear rigid.
Being consistent and repeating the same arguments and behaviours is seen as rigid and off putting to the majority.
instead the minority should adapt theor point of view and accept reasonable counter arguments
Explaining the process of minority
Individuals think deeply about the minority position becuase it is new/unfamiliar
snowball effect
over time more people become converted and there’s a switch from the minority to the majority
The more this happens the faster the rate of conversion
Gradually the minority view becomes the majority and social change has occurred
What is the snowball effect?
The snowball effect refers to a situation where something starts small and gradually grows larger and more significant over time.
Research supporting consistency- A03
Moscovici et al
found a consistent minority opinion had a greater effect on others than an inconsistent opinion
Wood et al. (1994)
conducted a meta-analysis of almost 100 similar studies
found that minorities seen as being consistent were most influential
confirming that consistency is a major factor in minority influence
Research showing role of deeper processing- A03
Martin et al. (2003)
gave participants a message supporting a particular viewpoint and measured attitudes
they then heard an endorsement of view from either a minority or a majority
finally they heard a conflicting view and then attitudes were measured again
participants were less willing to change their opinions to the new conflicting view if they’d listened to a minority group than if they listened to a majority group
Suggests that the minority message had been more deeply processed and had a more enduring effect
Low mundane realism- A03
In research studies majority and minority groups are distinguished in terms of numbers
But there’s more to majorities/minorities than just numbers
e.g. power, status, commitment
this means research studies are limited in what they tell us about real world minority influence
Artificial tasks- A03
Minority influence research often involves artificial tasks.
Moscovici et al.’s task was identifying the colour of a slide is much different to how minorities try to change opinion in the real world.
E.g. In jury decision making and political campaigning, outcomes are much more important
So findings of studies lack external validity and are limited in what they tells us about how minority influence works in real world situations
Power of minority influence- A03
Agreement with the minority was only 8% in Moscovici’s study
minority influence must be quite rare and so may not be a useful concept
But more participanst agreed with the minority when writing their answers privately
so those who go public must hold their new views very strongly
so minority influence is valid
it’s a relatively unusual form of social influence but can change people’s views powerfully and permanently