Social Influence - conformity

    Cards (26)

    • Conformity
      How a person changes attitude/behaviour due to group pressure
    • Levels of conformity
      • Compliance
      • Identification
      • Internalisation
    • Compliance
      Shallowest level of conformity, change in public behaviour but not private beliefs. Normative social influences
    • Identification
      Middle level of conformity, change public persona and their private beliefs. Normative social influence (Group presence)
    • Internalisation
      Deepest level of conformity, change public behaviour and private beliefs. Informational social influence (long term)
    • Normative social influence
      Conforming in order to be accepted
    • Normative social influence
      Associated with compliance and identification
    • Informational social influence
      Conforms to gain knowledge
    • Informational social influence

      Associated with internalisation
    • Outcomes of conformity
      • Change public behaviour
      • Change private belief
    • Timeframe of conformity
      • Short term
      • Long term
    • Compliance
      • Change public behaviour
      • No change private belief
    • Identification
      • Change public behaviour
      • Change private belief
    • Internalisation
      • Change public behaviour
      • Change private belief
    • Evaluating explanations for conformity: Research support for normative and compliance, research support for identification and internalisation, individual differences mean not everyone is impacted the same way
    • Jenness 1932
      Aim - Examine opinion changes in unclear situation. Method - 26 students estimated amount of beans in a bottle, then discussed in groups of 3 and re-estimated
    • Results - Men's estimates changed by 296 beans, women's changed by 332 beans. The whole range decreased by 75% (1813 to 474)
    • Conclusion - Change due to the thought of them being right
    • Asch 1951
      Aim - Determine the extent to which social pressure to conform from an unanimous majority affects conformity in an ambiguous situation. Method - 123 male students from Swarthmore college, 1 real participant with 6-7 confederates who gave pre-agreed incorrect answers
    • Results - 75% conformed, giving incorrect answers on 32% of critical trials. 25% never conformed
    • Conclusion - Desire to fit in
    • Evaluating Asch: Population validity limited, ecological validity low, lacks historical validity, broke ethical guidelines, potential demand characteristics
    • Variations of Asch experiment
      • Group size
      • Unanimity
      • Task difficulty
    • Group size - Conformity rates increased with 1-3 confederates, then dropped with more confederates as participants became suspicious
    • Unanimity - Conformity decreased if one confederate gave a different incorrect answer, or if the unanimous position was distorted
    • Task difficulty - Conformity increased with more difficult tasks, likely due to informational social influence
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