Social influence

    Cards (33)

    • Compliance
      Agreeing with the group externally but keeping personal opinions, a temporary change in behavior
    • Identification
      Behaving according to group membership, private values change only when with the group
    • Internalization
      Personal opinions genuinely change to match the group, a permanent change
    • Informational social influence (ISI)

      Looking to the majority for guidance on how to behave correctly, results in internalization
    • Normative social influence (NSI)

      Wanting to appear normal and be approved by the majority, results in compliance
    • Asch 1951 study found 32% of participants conformed to the incorrect group response
    • Jenness 1932 study found individuals' second private guesses moved closer to the group's guess, providing evidence for ISI
    • Variables affecting conformity

      • Group size (conformity increases with more confederates)
      • Presence of a dissenting voice (conformity drops if one confederate gives the correct response)
      • Task difficulty (conformity increases on more difficult tasks)
    • Croucher 2012 study found 52.6% of participants conformed at least once to online confederates' incorrect responses
    • Agentic state
      The individual believes they don't have responsibility for their behavior as they are just following orders from an authority figure
    • Autonomous state

      The individual feels their actions are free from control
    • Legitimacy of authority
      Individuals accept that people higher up in a social hierarchy should be obeyed
    • Milgram 1963 study found 65% of participants were willing to deliver the maximum 450 volt shock to the learner when instructed by the experimenter
    • Variations of Milgram's study found obedience decreased when the experimenter was not in a position of authority (e.g. not wearing a lab coat)
    • Bickman 1974 field study found 39% of people would pick up litter if asked by someone dressed as a security guard, but only 14% would do so if asked by someone dressed as a milkman
    • Factors affecting obedience

      • Proximity to victim (obedience decreases when the victim is physically closer)
      • Location (obedience increases in a more legitimate setting like a lab)
      • Uniform of authority figure (obedience decreases without a uniform)
    • Adorno argued that people with high levels of authoritarianism (as measured by the F-scale) were more likely to obey authority figures
    • Minority influence

      Minorities attempt to change majority opinion through informational social influence, leading to internalization
    • Characteristics of effective minority influence

      • Consistency in message over time
      • Flexibility to appear open-minded
      • Commitment to the cause, even if it means suffering
    • The snowball effect occurs when the minority view gains more acceptability and converts more members of the majority
    • Group membership affects how much we are influenced, with in-group members being more persuasive
    • Governments can drive social change quickly by changing and enforcing laws due to their legitimacy of authority
    • Social change on issues like knife crime, hate speech, and climate change has occurred through informational social influence from minority groups
    • Normative social influence is the tendency to conform to what we believe others expect us to do or say, even if it goes against our own beliefs.
    • Informational social influence occurs when people seek information from others about how they should behave in ambiguous situations.
    • Social norms are rules that govern social behavior.
    • Compliance is changing one's overt behavior without necessarily accepting the new attitude as one's own.
    • Identification is a form of social influence where an individual adopts the ideas or actions of a group to feel a sense of belonging or connection.
    • Minority influence refers to the ability of small but vocal minorities to create significant changes in society.
    • Conformity refers to adjusting one's attitudes or behaviors to match those of a group.
    • Minority influence refers to the ability of a small group of people to bring about significant changes in society's norms and values.
    • Internalization is changing one's attitudes and values so that they become part of one's personality.
    • Obedience involves following orders given by an authority figure.