- The pressure to conform can be resisted if there are other people present who are not conforming.
- In Asch's research, the confederate who is not conforming may not be giving the 'right' answer.
- The fact that someone else is not following the majority is social support - enables the naïve participant to be free to follow their own conscience.
- Confederate acts as a model of independent behaviour.
- Their dissent gives rise to more dissent because it shows that the majority is no longer unanimous.
- The pressure to obey can be resisted if there is another person who is seen to disobey.
- In one of Milgram's variations, the rate of obedience dropped from 65% to 10% when the genuine participant was joined by a disobedient confederate.
- The participant may not follow the disobedient person's behaviour, but the other persons disobedience acts as a model of dissent for the participant to copy.
- This frees him to act from his own conscience.
-This disobedient model challenges the legitimacy of authority figure, making it easier for others to disobey.
- People with internal LOC take personal responsibility for their actions and experiences (good or bad) then they are more likely to base their decisions on own beliefs and thus resist pressures from others.
- People with high internal LOC tend to be more self confident, more achievement-oriented, have higher intelligence and have less need for social approval.
- Holland repeated Milgram's baseline study and found that 37% of internals did not continue to highest shock level, whereas 23% of externals did no continue, showing that internal are more resistant to authority.