A type of social influence where a person yields to group pressures and changes their behaviour or opinion as a result of real or imagined pressure from a person or group
Making the beliefs, values, attitude and behaviour of the group your own (the strongest type of conformity, often occurs as a result of informational social influence)
When someone conforms because they want to be liked and be part of a group; when a person's need to be accepted or have approval from a group drives compliance
When a person shifts from an autonomous state (the state in which a person believes they will take responsibility for their own actions) to the agentic state
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
The F-scale is particularly susceptible to acquiscence bias, which describes the phenomenon of respondents always responding in the same way using the scales provided, regardless of the content shown in the scales
The Authoritarian Personality has little ecological validity because it cannot explain many real-life examples of mass obedience, such as the whole German population during Nazi occupation, who likely shared the same struggles in life and displaced their fear about the future onto a perceived 'inferior' group of people, through the process of scapegoating
The locus of control explanation is only valid for novel situations, as previous experiences are always more influential than LOC when an individual is making a decision as to how to act
Asch found that when one of the confederates did not conform, and gave the actual correct answer, conformity levels in the participant dropped to one quarter of what they were when the majority had been unanimous
The presence of the other person (who was actually a confederate) in Milgram's study caused the level of obedience to reduce to 10%, showing that the social support provided from the other participants gave them the confidence to reject the position of authority
Gamson et al found that when participants where placed in groups, 88% resisted the pressure to conform to the same smear campaign which other confederates had developed, demonstrating the significant influence of social support systems