P - Voluntary male university students were paired with another person (confederate) and each assigned leaner or teacher. Teacher was told to administer an electric shock every time the learner made a mistake, increasing the level of shock each time. If the participant refused to administer a shock the experimenter was to give a list of probes to ensure they continued
F - All participants shocked up to 300V and 65% shocked all the way up to 450V
Milgram AO3 - Low internal validity
Orne and Holland argued that pp were ‘play-acting’
Perry listened to tapes of Milgram’s participants and reported only half believed shocks were real
2/3 of these participants were disobedient so displayed demand characteristics
Sheridan and Kingcounter argued this by conducting an experiment where participants gave shocks to puppies, 54% of men and 100% of women gave what they thought was a fatal shock
Suggests effects in Milgram’s study were genuine as pp behaved obediently even when they could see the puppy in distress and the shocks were real
Milgram AO3 - Good external validity
Supporting study - Hofling et al
Nurses working in various hospitals receive calls from a confederate Dr, instructing them to give confederate patient 20mg of a made up drug - said he would sign the drug authorisation later
Label on the box clearly stated that the max dosage was 10mg
21 out of the 22 nurses that received a call from Dr complied without hesitation and 11 said they had not noticed the dosage discrepancy
Real life setting which showed nurses obeyed an authority figure (the doctor)
Milgram AO3 - Good external validity counterpoint
Rank and Jacobson - replicated the experiment but the instruction was to administer a known drug at 3 times the recommended level
Call came from a real known doctor and nurses were able to consult with other nurses before proceeding
Only 2 out of 18 nurses prepared the medication as requested
May have been less likely to follow the orders as it was a less ambiguous situation as the nurse was able to get support
Milgram AO3 - Supporting research
Findings of Milgram’s study were replicated in the French ‘Game of Death’ documentary about reality TV
Participants believed they were contestants in a pilot episode for a new show
Were paid to give electric shocks in front of audience - 80% delivered maximum shock and displayed behaviour identical to that of Milgram’s participants
Supports original findings and shows they were not just due to circumstance
Where was Milgram's experiment relocated to in variations?
Bickman conducted a field experiment in New York where three male researchers gave orders to 153 randomly selected participants
Researchers either dressed in a suit and tie, a milkman’s uniform or a guard”s uniform
Gave various orders for example: pointing to a bag on the street and saying “Pick up this bag for me”
Found that participants were most likely to obey the researcher dressed as a guard (89%), than the milkman (57%) or civilian (33%)
This supports the view that uniform does have a powerful effect on obedience
Milgram's variations AO3 - Effect of culture and gender
Experiment has been replicated by other researchers in many countries and with a variety of participants
Found that there were no gender differences in obedience
Places like Jordan had a higher obedience than the US whereas countries that were culturally similar to the US like Australia had similar obedience rates
Suggests that obedience applies to everyone in all cultures