A type of social influence where a person yields to group pressures and changes their behaviour or opinion as a result of real or imagined pressure from a person or group
Making the beliefs, values, attitude and behaviour of the group your own (the strongest type of conformity, often occurs as a result of informational social influence)
When someone conforms because they want to be liked and be part of a group; when a person's need to be accepted or have approval from a group drives compliance
When the task is difficult, we are more uncertain of our answer so we look to others for confirmation. The more difficult the task the greater the conformity
This suggests that informational social influence is a major mechanism for conformity when the situation is ambiguous and the individual does not have enough of their own knowledge or information to make an informed decision independently
How credible the figure of authority is. People are more likely to obey them if they are seen as credible in terms of being morally good/right, and legitimate
In Milgram's study, the participants saw the experimenter as legitimate as they knew he was a scientist and therefore likely to be knowledgeable and responsible
How credible the figure of authority is. People are more likely to obey them if they are seen as credible in terms of being morally good/right, and legitimate (i.e. legally based or law abiding)
Participants obeyed more when the study was conducted at a prestigious university, as the prestige demands obedience and increases trust in the researchers
Debriefing was thorough and careful, and a follow-up study found most participants were glad to have been part of the study and felt they learned something
Belief that people should completely obey or submit to their authority figures, and suppress their own beliefs. Characterized by a 'fixed' cognitive style and tendency to adopt absolutist/'black and white' thinking.