Explanations for Conformity

Cards (4)

  • Informational Social Influence - :) RTS Jenness
    > participants asked to individually estimate the number of jelly beans in a jar, decide on a group estimate, then have another private guess
    > participants second guess was significantly closer to group estimate
    > supports because the task was ambiguous and, as the participants were unsure of the answer, they sought information from their group and changed their answer to be right
  • Informational Social Influence - :( Jenness lacks ecological validity
    > study took place in an artificial environment
    > difficult to generalise the findings to real life examples of ISI - people may be less likely to conform in real life as there may be consequences for their actions
    > reducing the external validity of research into ISI
  • Normative Social Influence - :) RTS Asch
    > participants asked to state which line (A,B or C) was closest in length to stimulus line X
    > confederates answered first and gave an incorrect answer
    > found that participants conformed and said the same wrong answer 37% of the time
    > supports because the task was unambiguous, and participants later said they knew the answer but conformed to avoid ridicule
  • Normative Social Influence - :( Asch = gender bias
    > only males were tested
    > difficult to generalise to females - they may be more conformist as they are more concerned about social relationships and being liked by their peers (Neto 1995)
    > reduces external validity of research into NSI