Zimbardo’s research

    Cards (9)

    • Participants
      • a group of students that volunteered
      • those selected were deemed emotionally stable after extensive psychological testing
      • roles were randomly assigned
      • 21 males
      • university students
      • payed $15 a day
    • Procedure
      • To increase realism, ‘prisoners’ were arrested in their homes and delivered to the ‘prison’
      • they were blindfolded, strip-searched, deloused and issued a uniform and a number
      • The prisoners’ daily routines were heavily regulated. There were 16 rules to follow, enforced by guards working in shifts, three at a time
      • Prisoners’ names were never used, only their numbers.
      • Guards had their own uniform – wooden club, handcuffs, keys and mirror shades. They were told they had complete power over the prisoners, for instance deciding when they could go to the toilet.
    • Finding
      • Within two days, the prisoners rebelled against their treatment. They ripped their uniforms and shouted and swore at the guards, who retaliated with fire extinguishers.
      • Guards harassed the prisoners constantly by conducting frequent headcounts, sometimes in the middle of the night.
      • Guards highlighted the differences in social roles by creating opportunities to enforce the rules and punish slight misdemeanours.
      • The guards took up their roles with enthusiasm. Their behaviour threatened the prisoners' psychological and physical health.
    • Examples of what happened
      • After the rebellion was put down, the prisoners became subdued, anxious and depressed.
      • The study was stopped after six days instead of the planned 14 days.
      • Three prisoners were released early because they showed signs of psychological disturbance.
      • One prisoner went on hunger strike; the guards attempted to forcefeed him and punished him by putting him in 'the hole', a tiny dark closet.
    • Conclusions
      • The simulation revealed the power of the situation to influence people's behaviour.
      • Guards, prisoners and researchers all conformed to their social roles within the prison.
      • The more the guards identified with their roles, the more brutal and aggressive their behaviour became
    • Ethical issues with the study
      • lack of appropriate debriefing
      • lack of fully informed consent
      • physical harm
      • abuse of participants
      • not protecting participants from psychological and physical harm
    • Supporting research - Orlando 1973 ‘mock psychiactric mental ward’
      • staged a mock psychiatric ward
      • 29 of the hospital staff played the role of patients
      • other staff played their normal roles
      • study only lasted a few days
      • mock patients began to act like real patients
      • they took their roles very seriously = tried to escape, cried, had nervous breakdowns, increased tensions, anxiety, frustration and despair
    • Contrasting research = Reicher and Haslam 2006 “BBC prison experiment“
      • they claimed that zimbardos conclusion from the stanford prison experiment were wrong
      • they claimed that evil behavior wasn’t a result of group conformity
      • they claimed that the study showed when groups didn’t have a shared identity when there was a power vacuum and that led to tyranny being seen as an acceptable outcome
    • How did zimbardo control his variables?
      • controlled environment
      • all wore the same uniforms
      • all given the same information before the study