Social Influence - Conformity to Social Roles Flashcards

1
Q

Social role

A

The behaviours expected of an individual

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2
Q

What are the expected behaviours due to?

A

The social position status the person has occupied

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3
Q

Example of social roles

A

Fireman or police officer

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4
Q

Conformity to a social role

A

The extent of which people behave in the expected manners of their social role

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5
Q

Who carried out an experiment into conformity of social roles?

A

Zimbardo

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6
Q

What was the name of the experiment into conformity to social roles?

A

Zimbardo’s Stanford Prison Experiment

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7
Q

What year was the experiment into conformity to social roles carried out?

A

1971

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8
Q

Where was the SPE conducted?

A

In a mock prison set up in the basement of Stanford University

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9
Q

What sampling method was used to get participants for the SPE?

A

Volunteer sampling

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10
Q

What were participants offered for doing the SPE?

A

$15 per day

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11
Q

How many people volunteered to be in the SPE?

A

70

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12
Q

Out of all volunteers, how many participants were selected to be in the SPE?

A

24

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13
Q

Who was selected from the volunteers?

A

People who were deemed ‘emotionally stable’ to take part after completing screening

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14
Q

What roles were the volunteers assigned to? How were they assigned?

A

Randomly assigned to role of guard and role of prisoner

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15
Q

Participants of the SPE

A

All-male Stanford University students

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16
Q

How were the prisoners of the SPE taken to the prison?

A

They were arrested at their homes and transported to the prison

17
Q

What happened to the prisoners when they arrived at the prison in the SPE?

A

they were blindfolded, strip searched and given a uniform and a number instead of a name

18
Q

What were the guards given and told in the SPE?

A

Given a uniform, which included mirrored sunglasses, and told they had complete power over the prisoners

19
Q

Findings of the SPE for the guards

A

The guards became fully invested in their social roles

20
Q

How long was the SPE intended to last?

A

14 days

21
Q

How long did the SPE last?

A

6 days

22
Q

Why was the SPE cut short?

A

Because the guards became a threat to the prisoners physical and mental well-being

23
Q

What significant event happened after 2 days of the SPE?

A

The prisoners rebelled against the harsh treatment and the guards retaliated with violence and aggression

24
Q

What happened to one of the prisoners after day 1 of the SPE?

A

They were released after showing signs of psychological disturbance

25
Q

What happened to two of the prisoners on day 4 of the SPE?

A

They were released, with one of them going on the hunger strike due to the unfair treatment

26
Q

Zimbardo’s SPE conclusion

A

The power of the situation will influence peoples conformity to the behaviours of their social roles

27
Q

Who conformed to their roles within the SPE?

A

The guards, prisoners and researchers (even Zimbardo)

28
Q

Strength of the SPE: lab experiment

A

Experiment is completely controlled as it is a lab experiment

29
Q

Strength of the SPE: control

A

Individual differences controlled
Extraneous variables controlled

30
Q

Limitation of the SPE: replicability

A

Not easily replicable due to ethical guidelines

31
Q

Limitation of the SPE: sample

A

All-male and all-student sample means results may lack representativeness and generalisability

32
Q

Limitation of the SPE: Zimbardo as the prison warden

A

Investigator effects

33
Q

Limitation of the SPE: ethical issues

A

Deception
Possibility of psychological and physical harm to participants
Not fully informed consent

34
Q

Limitation of the SPE: realism

A

Experiment lacks realism as Zimbardo claims “if you put a good person in a bad situation they will conform” which isn’t necessarily true

35
Q

Limitation of the SPE: personality traits

A

Personality traits of the participants may of been dispositional influences to the results

36
Q

Who believes that the results of the SPE were influenced by dispositional influences?

A

Fromm as he accuses Zimbardo of exaggerating power of the situation and not taking dispositional influences into account