minority influence

    Cards (15)

    • MINORITY INFLUENCE:
      • form of social influence where a minority of people convince others to adopt their beliefs and behaviours.
      • leads to internalisation / convertion of private and public attitudes.
    • EXAMPLES OF MINORITY INFLUENCE:
      • nelson mandela.
      • BLM.
      • LGBTQ+ rights.
      • nazism.
    • MOSCOVICI'S STUDY - BLUE GREEN SLIDES:
      • group of 6 participants asked to view 36 slides thta varied in shades and intensity of blue.
      • had to identify if the slide was blue or green.
      • each group = 4 participants and 2 confederates (minority).
      • consistent experimental condition - confederates said blue slides were green.
      • inconsistent condition - confederates called the slides green on 2/3 of trials and 1/3 called them blue.
      • control condition - 6 participants and no confederates, ppts called slides blue throughout.
    • MOSCOVICI'S FINDINGS:
      • consistent condition - influenced by minority on 8.4% of trials, 32% were influenced on atleast one trial.
      • inconsistent condition - participants were influenced by minority on 1.25% of the trials.
      • control condition - got the colour wrong 0.25% of trials.
    • STRENGTH - SCIENTIFIC:
      • controlled lab experiment.
      • quantitative and objective data.
      • scientific as it identified cause and effect.
      • creates internal validity.
    • STRENGTH - SUPPORTS CONSISTENCY:
      • displays that minority's must be consistent in order to have influence.
    • LIMITATION - UNGENERALISABLE:
      • all of the participants were women, cannot be generalise to all of he population.
      • has been suggested that men conform differently.
    • LIMITATION - LOW PERCENTAGES AND EXAGGERATION
    • there are 3 main processes in minority influence:
      1. consistency.
      2. flexible.
      3. commitment.
    • CONSISTENCY:
      • consistency from a minority increases the amount of interest from others.
      • 2 kinds: synchronic and diachronic.
      • synchronic consistency is consistency of the ideas among the members of the minority.
      • diaschronic consistency is consistency over time.
    • COMMITMENT
      • some engage in extreme activities to draw attention to their point.
      • invovinf risk to demonstrate their commitment.
      • the augmentation principle - makes the majority pay more attention.
    • FLEXIBILITY:
      • nemeth - agrues being extremely consistent and repeating the same arguments over again can be seen as rigid and inflexible - does not influence the majority.
      • the minority need to be prepared to adapt their point of view and accept reasonable and valid counter-arguments.
      • key = strike balance between consistency and flexibility.
    • LIMITATION - ARTIFICAL TASK
      • lacks external validity.
      • Moscovici.
      • research is far removed from how minorities attempt to change behaviour.
      • tells us little about how minorities operate in real life.
    • STRENGTH - RESEARCH SUPPORT FOR INTERNALISATION.
      • Moscovici variation - ppts wrote answers down rather than speaking aloud.
      • private agreement with the minority position was greater.
      • appears the majority were convinced by the minority but were reluctant to admit it publically.
      • might be due to the fear iof being associated with the minority or being viewed as a radical.
    • STRENGTH - RESEARCH SUPPORT FOR CONSISTENCY:
      • moscovici.
      • showed consistent minority opinion had a greater effect on the majority then wehn the minoiryt was inconsistent in what they were saying - synchronic consistency.
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