internalisation - occurs when a person accepts the groups norms
internalisation have a private and public change of opinions and behaviours
changes are permenant with internalisation
internalisation is the strongest form of conformity
identification - when someone conforms so you can identify and be part of a group
with identification your opinions are only publically changed so you can be accepted into a group
compliance involves going along with others in public but not changing personal opinion and behaviour
compliance creates a superficial change
compliance is the weakest form of conformity
normative Social influence is about the desire to behave like others and not look foolish
normative Social influence is the explanation for compliance
normative Social influence is when you want to gain approval and not be perceived as deviant by other members of the group
informational social influence is who has the better information, you or the group
informational social influence is often unsure about what behaviours and beliefs are right or wrong so people follow the behaviour of the group they want to be right
informative Social influence leads to internalisation
informational social influence occurs when there is ambiguity