Social influence (conformity)

    Cards (17)

    • Conformity
      A change in a person's behaviour or opinions as a result of real or imagined pressure from a person or group of people
    • Group size
      Asch increased the size of the group by adding more confederates, thus increasing the size of the majority
    • Conformity increased with group size, but only up to a point, levelling off when the majority was greater than three
    • Unanimity
      The extent to which all the members of a group agree. In Asch's studies, the majority was unanimous when all the confederates selected the same comparison line
    • This produced the greatest degree of conformity in the naive participants
    • Task difficulty
      Asch's line-judging task is more difficult when it becomes harder to work out the correct answer
    • Conformity increased because naive participants assume that the majority is more likely to be right
    • Asch's baseline procedure
      1. Standard and comparison lines presented
      2. Participants tested in groups of 6-8
      3. Only one genuine (naive) participant
      4. Others were all confederates giving scripted incorrect answers
    • On average, the genuine participants agreed with confederates' incorrect answers 36.8% of the time (they conformed about a third of the time)
    • 25% of the participants never gave a wrong answer (never conformed)
    • Task difficulty increased
      Conformity increased
    • The physical arrangement of the participants in the study

      • The naïve (genuine) participant was always seated either last or (as here) next to last in the group
      • Participants gave their answers out loud, one at a time, beginning with the 1st person
    • Some students may simply have gone along with the group because they are more conformist, possibly because they are more concerned about relationships (and being accepted) than men are
    • Asch's study were from the United States, an individualistic culture where people are more concerned about themselves rather than the group
    • Similar conformity studies conducted in collectivist cultures where the social group is more important than the individual show higher conformity rates
    • Conformity levels are sometimes even higher than Asch's findings
    • Asch's findings may only apply to American men and do not take gender and cultural differences into account
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