social influence

    Cards (70)

    • conformity
      a change in a person's behaviour or opinions as a result of real or imagined pressure from a person or group of people
    • asch baseline procedure

      - aimed to test the extent people would conform in different situations
      - 123 american men
      - had to match up a line with one of three options
      - the answer was very clear
      - real ppt answered 6th out of 7
      - 36.8% conformity rate
    • artificial (AO3)

      - limitation
      - relatively trivial- meaning there's no reason to conform
      - susan fiske said the group wasn't very groupy- meaning they didn't resemble every day social groups
      - lack of real-world generalisability
    • limited application (AO3)

      - limitation
      - all pts were american men
      - some research suggest that women conform more
      - US is an individualist culture- similar studies in collectivist cultures like China found higher conformity rates
      - not a full explanation
    • group size

      - asch added more confederates, increasing the majority
      - conformity increased with size but eventually levelled off
    • unanimity
      - the extent to which all members agree
      - conformity increased when group was unanimous
      - presence of a dissenter decreases conformity to less than 1/4
    • task difficulty

      - the harder it is the more conform
    • research support (AO3)

      - strength
      - Lucas et al. asked ppts easy and hard maths questions
      - confederates gave wrong answers
      - ppts conformed more with harder questions

      - counter
      - Lucas et al. found that conformity is more complex as ppts with higher confidence in their abilities conformed less
      - shows that an individual-level factor can influence conformity
    • internalisation
      - deep form of conformity
      - believe it is correct
      - more permanent change
      - even when group is absent
    • identification
      - moderate from of conformity
      - value the group opinion and what to be a part of it
      - don't agree with everything
    • compliance
      - superficial
      - temporary
      - outwardly conform
      - privately disagree
    • informational social influence (ISI)

      - explanation for conformity
      - agree with majority as we believe it is correct
      - want to be correct
      - may lead to internalisation
    • research support (AO3)

      - strength
      - Lucas et al.
      - ppts conformed to more difficult questions as it became unclear and didn't want to be wrong

      - counter
      - it is unclear whether it is SI or ISI at work
      - the dissenter could reduce power of NSI by being social support or could reduce ISI as an alternative source of information
      - hard to separate as they operate together in real life
    • normative social influence (NSI)

      - explanation for conformity
      - agree with majority as we want to gain social approval and be liked
      - may lead to compliance
    • research support (AO3)
      - strength
      -when ash interviwed his ppts asking why they conformed they said it was because they felt self-conscious and were afraid of disapproval
      - when ppts wrote answers down, conformity fell to 12.5%
    • individual differences (AO3)

      - limitation
      - doesn't predict conformity in every case
      - nAffiliators are concerned with being liked by others so are more likely to conform
    • social roles
      the parts people play as members of various social groups
    • zimbardo's stanford prison experiment

      - mock prison in the basement of the psychology department at stanford university
      - 21 male volunteers tested as emotionally stable
      -randomly assigned prison guard or prisoner
      - prisoners were given a loose smock to wear and a cap to cover their head, identified as a number
      - guards had a wooden club, handcuffs, mirror shades
      - they were encouraged to identify with their social role
    • zimbardo's findings

      - guards conformed to role
      - prisoners were punished, rebelled, went on strikes, guards retaliated with fire extinguishers
    • control (AO3)

      - strength
      - random allocation- ruled out individual differences
      - increased internal validity
    • lack of realism (AO3)

      - limitation
      - ppts were play-acting rather than conforming
      - ppts based off of stereotypes

      - counter
      - ppts behaved as if it was real
      - 90% of conversations were about prison life
    • exaggerates the power of roles (AO3)

      - limitation
      - only 1/3 of the guards acted in a brutal manner
      - 1/3 tried to apply the rules fairly
      - the other 1/3 tried to help the prisoners
      - minimised effect of personality
    • obedience
      a form of social influence, where an individual follows a direct order usually from an authoritative figure
    • milgram's baseline procedure
      - 40 american male volunteers
      - drew lots- confederate = learner, real ppt = teacher
      - experiementer ordered ppt to give an increasingly strong shock if they got it wrong
    • milgram's baseline findings

      - every ppt delivered all shocks up to 300 volts
      - 12.5% stopped at 300
      - 65% continued to the hoghest- 450
      - qualititive data collected and observations
    • research support (AO3)

      - strength
      - replicated in a french documentary
      - ppts in the game believed they were contestants for a pilot episode on a new show
      - they were paid to gave shocks to the confederate in front of a studio audience
      - 80% delivered max shock of 450
      - identical observations as milgram's study
    • low internal validity (AO3)

      - limitation
      - 75% said they believed the shocks were genuine
      - others argue that the ppts were play acting
      - in the tapes 2/3 were disobedient
      - ppts may have been responding to demand characteristics

      - counter
      - sheridan and king replicated milgram's study with puppies
      - despite the real distress from the animal 54% men and 100% of women gave what they believed was a fatal shock
    • alterantive interpretation of the findings (AO3)

      - limitation
      - according to the social identity theory, the ppts only obeyed when they identified with the specific aims of the research, when they were told to blindly obey they refused
    • situational variables

      features of the immediate physical and social environment which may influence a person's behaviour
    • proximity
      - obedience dropped from original 65% to 40% when he teacher and learner were in the same room
      - when the teacher had to force the learner's hand onto the plate, obedience dropped to 30%
      - when the experimenter left the room, obedience reduced to 20.5%
    • location
      when conducted in a run-down office block rather than in yale uni, obedience fell to 47.5%
    • uniform
      when experimenter wore everyday clothes instead of a lab coat, obedience dropped to 20%
    • research support (AO3)

      - strength
      - in a field study, bickman had 3 confederates dress in a jacket and tie, a milkman's outfit, and a security guard's uniform
      - they asked people to pick up litter
      - twice as likely to obey security guard than the jacket and tie
    • cross-cultural replications (AO3)

      - strength
      - meeus and raaijmakers
      - had a more realistic procedure
      - ppts forced to say stressful things in an interview to a confederate desperate for a job
      - 90% obeyed
      - also replicated proximity

      - counter
      - smith and bond identified study replications from india and jordon with different results
    • low internal validity (AO3)

      - limitation
      - orne and holland
      - ppts may be aware that it was fake
      - demand characteristics
    • agentic state

      a mental state where we feel no responsibility for our behaviour as we are acting for an authority figure
    • autonomous state

      acting independently, , own principles, responsibility for their own actions
    • binding factors

      aspects of the situation which allow the person to minimise the damaging effect of their behaviour.
      e.g. shifting blame
    • research support (AO3)

      - strength
      - milgram's research supports this
      - when someone asked who is responsible if the ppt gets hurt the experimenter replied 'im responsble' and the ppt would carry on
      - once establishing they are no longer responsible, they acted as an agent
    • a limited explanation (AO3)

      - limitation
      - rank and jacobson study
      - 16/18 nurses disobeyed orders from doctors to administer an excessive drug dose to a patient
      - doesn't apply to all situations