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Psychology A-Level
Social Influence
Milgram
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Created by
Emma Duell
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Cards (30)
Obedience
A type of
social
influence whereby someone acts in response to a direct order from a figure of perceived
authority
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Obedience
to
authority
is a more direct process than conforming to majority influence
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In
obedience
, the individual may have
less
choice to whether they comply or not
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Milgram's
Aims
To investigate whether 'ordinary' people will obey an
authority
figure ordered the participant to give an increasingly strong shock to a
learner
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Milgram's Procedures
1.
40 male
American participants volunteered
2. Introduced to a
confederate
3. Drew lots for
roles
4. Experimenter present in the
room
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Milgram's Ethical Issues
Unethical
Blurred
right to withdraw
Deception
Protection
from harm
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A weakness is that Milgram's study was
unethical
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Participants were
deceived
about the confederate's
heart
condition
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Participants were told they were administering
real electric shocks
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Participants did not have the right to
withdraw
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Participants were given
prods
when
reluctant
to continue
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Internal validity
About
controls
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External validity
Can this be
generalised
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A
limitation
of Milgram's research is that his
procedure
may not have been testing what he intended to test
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75
% of participants thought the shocks were
genuine
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Other research found that only
half
of participants believed the
shocks
were real
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Only
1/3
of participants were obedient
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Participants may have been responding to
demand characteristics
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Milgram's study is lacking in
ecological validity
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A strength of Milgram's research is evidence to suggest it has
high ecological validity
when applied to
real world
situations
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Sheridan
and
King's
study supports Milgram's research
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Milgram's
findings can be generalized and applied to
real life
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Milgram's study used both
men
and women compared to
white American
men
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Milgram's
study has been replicated in a
French
documentary about reality TV
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French documentary replication
1. Participants believed they were
contestants
2. Paid to give
fake
electric shocks
3.
80
% delivered maximum shock of
460
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Behaviors in the
French
documentary were almost
identical
to Milgram's participants
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Signs of
anxiety
were shown in the
French
documentary participants
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The findings from the French documentary support Milgram's findings about
obedience to authority
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The findings demonstrate that
Milgram's
results were not just due to
special circumstances
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The
French
study shows it can be generalized and has
cross-cultural
validity
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