social influence

    Cards (67)

    • Conformity
      A type of social influence where a person yields to group pressures
    • Conformity
      A change in a person's behaviour or opinion as a result of a real or imagined pressure from a person or group of people
    • Types of conformity (Kelman)

      • Internalisation
      • Identification
      • Compliance
    • Internalisation
      Making the beliefs, values, attitude and behaviour of the group your own (strongest type of conformity, often occurs as a result of informational social influence)
    • Identification
      Temporary/short term change of behaviour and beliefs only in the presence of a group (middle level)
    • Compliance
      Following other people's ideas/going along with the group to gain their approval or avoid disapproval (lowest/weakest level of conformity)
    • Informational social influence

      Conforming because you want to be right, so you look to others by copying or obeying them, to have the right answer in a situation
    • Normative social influence
      Conforming because you want to be liked and be part of a group; your need to be accepted or have approval from a group drives compliance
    • NSI and ISI may not be completely exclusive, as suggested by Deutsch and Gerrard's 'Two Process Model'
    • It may be more beneficial to look at NSI and ISI as complementary, as opposed to mutually exclusive mechanisms
    • Asch's study

      • 123 male American undergraduates in groups of 6; 1 true participant and 5 confederates
      • Participants and confederates were presented with 4 lines; 3 comparison lines and 1 standard line
      • Confederates would give the same incorrect answer for 12 out of 18 trials
      • Asch observed how often the participant would give the same incorrect answer as the confederates versus the correct answer
    • Group size
      An individual is more likely to conform when in a larger group
    • Unanimity of majority

      An individual is more likely to conform when the group is unanimous i.e. all give the same answer, as opposed to them all giving different answers
    • Task difficulty

      An individual is more likely to conform when the task is difficult
    • Zimbardo's study

      • 24 American male undergraduate students
      • Participants randomly issued roles of guard or prisoner in a simulated prison
      • Behaviour of participants observed
    • Agentic state

      When a person believes that someone else will take responsibility for their own actions
    • Agentic shift
      When a person shifts from an autonomous state (where they believe they will take responsibility for their own actions) to the agentic state
    • Legitimacy of authority

      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
    • Expert authority

      When the authority figure is seen as legitimate because they are an expert, like a scientist
    • Agentic state
      When people believe they are acting on behalf of an authority figure, rather than taking personal responsibility for their actions
    • Legitimacy of authority

      How credible the figure of authority is. People are more likely to obey them if they are seen as morally good/right, and legally based or law abiding
    • Students are more likely to listen to their parents or teachers than other unknown adults
    • Expert authority

      When the authority figure is seen as knowledgeable and responsible, like a scientist
    • The study suffered from demand characteristics and lacked ecological validity
    • The sample only consisted of American male students, so the findings cannot be generalised to other genders and cultures
    • There was a lack of fully informed consent due to the deception required
    • Participants were not protected from stress, anxiety, emotional distress and embarrassment
    • Proximity

      • Participants obeyed more when the experimenter was in the same room (62.5%) vs in a different room (40%) or touch proximity (30%)
    • Location
      • Participants obeyed more when the study was conducted at a prestigious university
    • Uniform
      • Participants obeyed more when the experimenter wore a lab coat
    • Demand characteristics were particularly evident in the uniform condition
    • Authoritarian personality

      Belief that people should completely obey or submit to their authority figures, and suppress their own beliefs
    • Fixed cognitive style

      Tendency to adopt absolutist/'black and white' thinking and not challenge stereotypes
    • Reaction formation

      When a person unconsciously fears and despises their parents, and displaces this anger onto seemingly 'inferior' others
    • The F-scale used to measure authoritarian personality is susceptible to acquiescence bias
    • Adorno's psychodynamic theory

      A person's personality traits and attitudes as an adult stemmed from childhood influences such as that of one's parents
    • Scapegoating
      Child with overly harsh and disciplinarian parents displaces their anger with their parents onto seemingly 'inferior' others
    • On a surface level, the child would idolise their parents, but on an unconscious level, they would fear and despise them, and so arises the need to displace such anger
    • The child would be more likely to target their displaced anger on those who seem weak and unable to defend themselves, such as minority groups
    • Reaction formation

      The process where the child displaces their anger onto seemingly 'inferior' others
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