private and public views only change within the group
internalisation
private and public views change to match the group
compliance
opinions change publicly but not privately
normative social influence
desire to be liked-individual wants to appear to be normal
informational social influence
driven by desire to be correct
Aschstudy- groups from 8-10 (123 under grads in total) with only 1 real participant and the rest being confederates there where 12 trials where participants are asked which line matches the shown line- confederates gave wrong answers to see if the participant would conform
asch study findings: 75% of participants conformed to the majority view once: overall was 32%:5% conformed every time
group size: 10-12 participants, 1-2 researchers, 1-2 observers-conformity increased with group size
unanimity:when one confederate gave the correct answer
task difficulty: the harder the task the more likely people where to conform
acsh evaluation: took place at a time where conformity was high-when repeated (396 trials) conformity dropped to 15%
asch evaluation: low generalisability- only used on one particular group of people- cannot be generalised to women/ older people
asch evaluation: low ecological validity-particapants where looking at lines- doesnt happen in real life-cannot be applied to real life scenarios
Zimbardo's experiment into social roles: fake prison set up in the basement of Sandford university using 24 male volunteer student participants: they where randomly allocated being prisoners or guards: participants conformed to their roles with guards becoming aggressive and prisoners showing high signs of stress: experiment was cancelled after 6 days due to the prisoners showing high signs of mental discomfort.
Zimbardo evaluation: some guards didn't conform into these sadistic roles: participants chose how to behave
Zimbardo evaluation: psychological harm to prisoners- experiment should of been stopped sooner-participants received many debriefing sessions for no long lasting effects-experiment was repeated by other researchers but minimised amount of emotional harm the pisoners would face
Zimbardo evaluation: low generalisability due to no women/ different ages
agentic state
state of mind where a person believes they have no responsibility for their actions
legitimacy of authority
individuals learn the social hierarchy and to obey to people above them
mailgrams experiment: involved 40 participants: used to measure obedience: two confeds and 1 real participant
milgram findings that lowered obedience: location 48%: learner in the room 40%: teacher pushing had down 30%: experimenter over phone 21%: participant with fake participant saying no 10%
social support
seeing other people resist reduces pressure to conform
externality
tend to believe their behaviour and experience is caused by events outside their control
internality
tend to believe that they are responsible for their behaviours/ experiences
locus of control
people differ on what they believe effects the outcomes of their actions
consistency
minorities are more effective if they repeat the same message over time
commitment
if minority suffers for their views people are more likely to take them seriously
flexibility
a willingness to compromise when expressing a position
snowball effect
where a minority influence spreads more widely until reaching a tipping point which leads to a wide scale social change