Social Influence

Cards (24)

  • Compliance
    Agreeing with the group externally but keeping personal opinions, a temporary change in behavior
  • Identification
    Behaving according to group membership, private values change only when with the group
  • Internalization
    Personal opinions genuinely change to match the group, a permanent change
  • Informational social influence (ISI)

    Looking to the majority for guidance on how to behave correctly, results in internalization
  • Normative social influence (NSI)
    Wanting to appear normal and be approved by the majority, results in compliance
  • Asch 1951 study found 32% of participants conformed to the incorrect group response</b>
  • Jenness 1932 study found individuals' second private guesses moved closer to the group's guess, providing evidence for ISI
  • Some people are more able to resist social pressure to conform

    • Those with an internal locus of control
  • Conformity increases with group size and decreases with the presence of a dissenting voice
  • Conformity increases when the task is more difficult, due to the role of ISI
  • Zimbardo's Stanford Prison Experiment showed how situational factors can cause people to conform to social roles
  • Milgram's obedience studies showed how people will obey an authority figure, even when asked to do something morally wrong
  • Agentic state

    The individual believes they don't have responsibility for their behavior as they are just following orders
  • Legitimacy of authority
    The individual accepts that those higher in the social hierarchy should be obeyed
  • Milgram found obedience decreased when the authority figure was not in a lab coat or uniform
  • Bickman 1974 field study found 39% of people would pick up litter if asked by someone in a security guard uniform, but only 14% if asked by someone in regular clothes
  • Milgram's study caused distress to participants and lacked ecological validity
  • Adorno argued those with authoritarian personalities are more likely to obey
  • Factors that help resist social influence
    • Social support, challenging authority, internal locus of control
  • Minority influence
    Minorities attempt to change majority opinion through informational social influence, a slow process that can speed up through the snowball effect
  • Characteristics of effective minority influence
    • Consistency, flexibility, commitment
  • Social change often occurs due to minorities gradually converting the majority through the snowball effect
  • In-group members are more influential than out-group members in changing opinions
  • Governments can quickly drive social change by changing and enforcing laws