resistance to social influence

    Cards (23)

    • External locus of control
      Belief that things that happen to them are out of their control
    • External locus of control example
      • Blaming the teacher for doing bad on an exam
    • Internal locus of control
      Belief that things that happen to them are due to their own actions and are in their control
    • Internal locus of control example 

      • Saying they did bad on an exam because they didn't study enough
    • Locus of control continuum
      Range from high external locus of control to high internal locus of control
    • Locus of control continuum
      • High external locus of control at one end
      • High internal locus of control at the other end
    • Rotter designed a questionnaire
      To measure locus of control
    • High internal locus of control

      More resistance to social influence
    • Rotter's questionnaire has been validated in many studies
    • Twenge et al did a meta-analysis of LOC studies from across 40 years, found resistance increased overtime and so did external LOC
    • The meta-analysis suggests LOC is not a valid explanation for resisting social influence
    • The effect of LOC depends on the situation and only has a significant effect in new situations
    • This decreases the validity of the LOC explanation
    • Holland repeated Milgram's study and measured whether participants had an internal or external LOC, internal LOC resisted obeying 37% of the time and external LOC only 23%
    • This shows a correlation between internal LOC and disobedience, providing validity for the LOC explanation
    • Social support
      If people feel as if they have support in their actions they are more likely to resist
    • Social support in Conformity
      • Someone else not following the majority
      • No longer unanimous
    • Asch found conformity dropped when there was social support
    • Social support in Obedience
      • Support of someone else disobeying
      • Milgram found obedience dropped to 10% when there was a disobeying person
    • Supporting evidence from Conformity
      • Asch's experiment - when one confederate gave the correct answer, conformity dropped to 5.5%
    • Supports that..
      • Social support decreases the pressure to conform
      • Allows people to resist conformity
    • Supporting evidence from Obedience
      • Milgram's experiment - when participants were paired with a confederate who refused to give the shock, obedience fell to 10%
    • Supports that…
      • Social support decreases the pressure to obey
      • Allows people to resist obedience