The most superficial and least permanent change in attitude. Individuals publicly change their beliefs and behaviours to be in line with a group and to fit in, but in private, revert back to original belief systems and behaviours, when the group pressure stops.
A stronger type of conformity, involving possible private as well as public acceptance. This occurs when individuals look to a group for guidance and adjust their behaviour and belief systems to those of a group because membership of the group is desirable and they take on a role within the group.
The deepest and most permanent change in attitude. Individuals publicly and privately change their behaviours and belief systems to go along with a group norm, because we accept their attitudes in to our own cognitions (internalise them), the behaviour lasts when the majority are no longer present.
Driven by the desire to be right. When an individual is unsure (lacks knowledge) about how to behave, they conform by seeking information from the group about how to behave and assume that it is right.
Driven by our desire to be liked. An individual will 'go along with' a group's behaviour in order to avoid ridicule and gain acceptance from them and fit in.
Aim: To investigate how freely people would conform to the roles of guard and prisoner in a role-playing exercise that re-created prison life
Sample: A volunteer sample of 24 'emotionally stable' US male university students
Procedure: Participants randomly allocated to role of prisoner or guard, prisoners arrested and processed, guards given uniforms and instructions, basement of psychology department converted into mock prison
Findings: Within a day the prisoners rebelled and the guards responded with escalating punishments, prisoners rapidly became subdued and depressed, experiment called off after 6 days
Conclusions: Guards, prisoners and researchers conformed to their role within the prison, social roles have an extraordinary power over individuals
Conformity to social roles definition: Social roles are the parts that people play as members of various social groups e.g. teachers and students. These are accompanied by expectations that we, and others, have of what is appropriate behaviour in each role. We internalise these expectations, so they shape our behaviour.
1. Aim: To investigate if individuals would obey the orders of an authorityfigure even if this led to negative consequences
2. Method: Laboratoryexperiment at Yale University,40Americanmales aged 20-50
3. Procedure: Participants assigned role of 'teacher', instructed to administer electric shocks to 'learner' (confederate) for wrong answers, experimenter used prompts to encourage obedience
4. Findings: Allparticipants went to at least 300 volts, 65% continued to maximum 450 volts
5. Conclusion: Ordinary people are obedient to authority when asked to behave in an inhumane way
Proximity: How near or far the participant is to the victim or authority figure, obedience decreased when participant could directly see the consequences
Location: Where the experiment takes place, obedience decreased in more informal settings
Uniform: Wearing an authoritative uniform increased obedience
How near or far (close) the ppt (teacher) is to the victim (learner) or experimenter (authority figure)
In Milgram's original experiment the teacher could not see the learner, only hear them and obedience was 65%. When both the teacher and learner were in the same room obedience fell to 40%
When the teacher was required to force the learners hand onto the electric shock plate (touch proximity) obedience dropped even further to 30%
In remote instruction variation, the experimenter left the room and gave instructions to the teacher by telephone. Obedience fell to 20.5%, suggesting the closer an authority figure is, the more obedient the individual will be
Wearing of uniforms can give a perception of added legitimateauthority to the individual delivering the orders
In one variation, when the experimenter in the lab coat was called away and replaced by an 'ordinary member of the public' who wore everydayclothes, obedience dropped to 20%
Uniform acts as a strong visualauthoritysymbol and a cue to act in an obedient manner
Bickman's research in New York found participants were twice as likely to follow instructions from a confederate wearing a security guard uniform than a business man, supporting the power of uniform as a variable affecting obedience
Milgram's research into situational variables affecting obedience has gender bias as a male only sample was used, making it difficult to generalise to females
An alternative explanation for obedience is dispositional factors (internal factors) e.g. The Authoritarian Personality, suggesting obedience may not just be due to situational factors
Mandel criticised Milgram's research, arguing that the Nazi's were not simply obeying orders due to situational variables, but were responsible for their evil behaviour
People may move from an autonomous state where they take personal responsibility, to a state where they believe they are acting on behalfofanauthority figure. This occurs when someone perceives somebody as an authority figure. In the agentic state, they lose sense of personalresponsibility and are more likely to obey
Obedient individuals accept the power and status of authority figures and see them as being in charge. Factors affecting this include uniform and location. The more legitimate a person perceives the authority figure to be, the more likely they are to shift from autonomous to the agentic state
Hofling's study on nurses supports both the legitimacy of authority and agentic state explanations as they obeyed an unknown doctor's orders over the phone
An alternative explanation is dispositional factors like the authoritarian personality, suggesting obedience may not just be due to situational factors
A collection of personality traits said to develop from strictparenting, including extreme respect for perceived authority, submission to people in perceivedauthority, disapproval of lowstatus individuals, and strict adherence to socialrules and hierarchies