Investigated group sizes affect on conformity, varied the number of confederates used (2-16 in total), found a curvilinear relationship since they increased with each other (conformity became 31.8%)
Asch made the line length task vary from very easy to very complex, finding conformity increase thinking its because the participants are unsure and therefore agree to not be left out
Believe it what the majority says due to believing they're right, following the behaviour of the majority, cognitive process, can lead to internalisation, in new or crisis situations
21 participants since 3 dropped out, all male student volunteers, randomly assigned the role of a prison guard or prisoner, given uniforms for each, had to conform to their roles
Lacked realism of a real prison – Banuazizi and Movahedi (1975) argued that they were just conforming to the role since their performance was based on stereotypes (films they watched)
Fromm (1973) exaggerated social roles, 1/3 guards acted brutal, 1/3 were fair, 1/3 were trying to help the prisoners- Zimbardo overestimated their conformity to social roles due to the pity some guards took
40 American male volunteers told it was a study on memory, rigged experiment where the confederates were the 'Learner' and the 'Experimenter' (dressed in a lab coat), and the participant was the 'Teacher', E ordered T (participant) to give an increasing shock to L in another room (15-450 volts) which were fake, Prods were used to keep T obedient, found that everyone put the volts to 300, 12.5% stopped there, 65% continued to the highest level of 450 volts
14 psych students predicted 3% going to 450V (unexpected results), with a debrief afterwards making sure their behaviour was normal, then followed up with a questionnaire
Used students shocking a puppy – 54% of men and 100% of women gave what was said to be a lethal shock , making mil grams study genuine since people were the same when the shocks were real
Perry (2013) confirmed that only 2 anticipates believed the shocks were real, so the participants were responding to demand characteristics by trying to fulfil the aims of the experiment
People only obeyed when they agreed with the prods and how they agreed with the study (refusing the 4th prod) due to the social identity theory (Haslam 2014)
Participants were deceived since they ere told the allocation of roles were random when they were set, and that the shocks were real – milgram gave a debrief to deal with this
Lower proximity decreased the obedience due to the psychological distance between the participant and the learner, Higher proximity like L and T in the same room the obedience was 40% from 60%, T forcing Ls hand on the button made the toxicity 30%, instructions over the phone it went to 20.5%, Physical distance made T less aware of the damage they were causing so they were more obedient
Milgrams experiment was performed in a Yale uni and was 65% obedient, then in a run-down office and became 47.5%, The location gave legitimacy, which was assumed to be shared with the experiment, Still high in the office due to participants believing in the 'scientific' nature of the experiment
Grey lab coat wore in the original, which was perceived as authority, in a variation an 'ordinary member of the public' took over the experiment wearing casual clothes, making the obedience drop to 20%, People accept those in uniform having authority, and are therefore obedient to them, when it changed to someone casual, they are seen to not have the legitimacy therefore don't require their obedience