Social Influence- Milgram (obediance) Flashcards

1
Q

What are the two explanations of obedience?

A

-Situational attribution
-Dispositional attribution

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2
Q

Define situational attribution

A

-Inferring that a persons behaviour is caused by something about the situation they are in

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3
Q

Define dispositional attribution

A

-Inferring that the reason for a persons behaviour is something about themselves such as their personality

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4
Q

What was the aim of mailgrams study?

A

-To find out whether ordinary Americans would obey unjust orders from a person of authority to inflict pain on another person

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5
Q

How was the study advertised?

A

-In a local newspaper
-Paid $4.50
-A study about how punishment affects learning

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6
Q

How many volunteers was there and where were they from?

A

-40
-A range of backgrounds

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7
Q

How were the learners selected?

A

-Through a rigged draw so it would be the confederates

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8
Q

What was the procedure

A

-Teacher was required to administer electric shocks after every wrong answer
-Teacher was given a mild shock before hand to prove that the machine was real
-Started at 15 volts and went up 15 every time, max was 450

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9
Q

What was heard up to 300 volts?

A

-Screams but they stopped at 300 volts

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10
Q

What were the results?

A

-100% delivered shocks up until 300
-65% delivered shocks up until 450
-Much higher than they expected

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11
Q

What was the conclusion of this study?

A

-People obey instructions from authoritive figures even if it harms another participant

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12
Q

What happened if the teacher asked to stop?

A

-Prompted to carry on
- “this experiment requires you to continue”
-“you have no other choice you must continue

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13
Q

Why were the controls kept the same for every participant?

A

-So there were few exrentaneous variables

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14
Q

What were the consequences of this study?

A

-Suffered extreme nervous tension- nervous laughing
-Physically sweating
-Continually asking for reassurance from experimenter
-One participant had an epileptic fit

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15
Q

How were the participants debriefed after the experiment?

A

-Told their behaviour was normal
-Told the nature of the experiment
-Followed up a year later to ensure there was no lasting psychological problems

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16
Q

Give 3 strengths of this study

A

-Reliable- standardised procedure
-Helps to explain real life situations
-study identified important factors that affect a persons obedience of legitimacy of authority

17
Q

Give 3 weaknesses of this study

A

-Lacks temporal validity
-Lacks internal validity
-Breaks ethical guidelines

18
Q

Why were there variations of the original experiment?

A

-To see which factors increased/ decrease obedience

19
Q

Which factors increase obedience?

A

-Legitimacy of authority
-Social isolation
-Proximity to victim
-Gradual commitment
-Deferred responsibility

20
Q

Why is the study being unethical a limitation?

A

P- Broke ethical guidelines set out in 1953
E-Deceived- told them they were investigating the effect of punishment and learning when he was measuring obedediance and lied about the electric shocks
-Right to withdraw- very difficult, prompted to carry on
Harm-Very stressed+ anxious
L- An issue because the volunteers felt guilt about possibly harming another participant
Counter: Essential to deceive and remove the right of withdrawal from the participants to get valid results

21
Q

Why is ecological validity a weakness of this study?

A

P-Lacks ecological validity
E-tested obedience in a lab, very different to real life situations
E-People are normally asked to follow subtle instructions not administer electric shocks
L-Cannot generalise findings to real life situations, people may obey less severe instructions differently

22
Q

Why is low population validity a limitation?

A

P-Lacks population validity
E-Bias sample of 40 men- underepresentitve
E-cannot generalise to the whole population particularly females
L-Cannot conclude that females would respond in the same way
Counter: Did include men from various different backgrounds so some cultural diversity

23
Q

How is research support a strength of this study?

A

P- Beauvoir et al 2012
E- A French documentary focused on a game sow, participants were paid to give electric shocks ordered by the presenter to other participants in front of a studio audience- Fake shock and actor
E-80% of the participants delivered the max shock (460) to an unconscious man
L-Participants were visibly anxious, supports mailgrams original findings of obeying authorities

24
Q

What were the 6 variations of Milgram’s study?

A

-Someone lese administered the shock
-The experiment took place in a rundown office building
-The teacher and learner were in the same room
-The teacher had to force the learners hand onto the shock plate
-The experimenter gave instructions to the teacher over the phone
-Participants worked in groups to shock the learner (two rebelled and refused to go on

25
Q

What were the percentages of the participants who administered 450 volts in each of the variations?

A

-Someone lese administered the shock- 92.5%
-The experiment took place in a rundown office building- 48%
-The teacher and learner were in the same room- 40%
-The teacher had to force the learners hand onto the shock plate- 30%
-The experimenter gave instructions to the teacher over the phone-20%
-Participants worked in groups to shock the learner (two rebelled and refused to go on- 10%

26
Q

What was the method of Hoflings (1966) study?

A

-22 real nurses+ Dr. Smith ( the researcher) phoned the hospital asking the nurses to administer a drug they had never heard of (it was a placebo)- Astron
-Max dose was 10mg but they were asked to give 20mg
-Dr.smith said he would sign the authorisation form when he got there

27
Q

What were the results of Hoflings (1966) study?

A

-21/22 nurses started to give the drug until they were stopped by another nurse
-When interviewed after they all said that they were asked to go against training rules by doctors regularly

28
Q

Outline Bickman’s study (1974)

A

-Dressed up in uniforms of a civilian, milkman and a guard
-Asked random members of the public to carry out instructions such as dropping litter on the floor

29
Q

What are the factors affecting obedience

A

-Agentic state
-Legitimacy of authority
-Uniform
-Location
-Proximity

30
Q

What is Agentic state ?

A

-Where we can deny personal responsibility for our actions as we have been ordered to behave this way
-or we can shift the responsibility onto the person who told us to do it

31
Q

How does agentic state link to the variations, Hofling or milligrams variations?

A

-Hofling- can blame Dr. Smith as he was the one who ordered us to administer the drug
-Milgram variation- someone else administered the electric shock, 92.5% of the participants went up to 450v

32
Q

What is the Legitimacy of authority?

A

-An authority figure must have some kind of social power over us which is usually the power to punish
-We have to perceive the person as genuine to follow their instructions

33
Q

How does the legitimacy of authority link to the variations?

A

-Hofling (1966)
-The doctor had legitimate authority over the nurses so they did not want to face the consequences if they did not administer the drug

34
Q

How does uniform affect obedience?

A

-Research suggests that we are more likely to obey a person in uniform, in comparison to a person not wearing a uniform

35
Q

How does uniform link to the variations?

A

-Bickman (1974)
-People are more likely to obey the guard in comparison to a civillian as the uniform gives the guard legitimate authority

36
Q

How does location affect obedience?

A

-The legitimacy of the location affects obedience
-We have to believe the setting is genuine for an order to take place

37
Q

How does location link to the variations?

A

-Milgram variation- run-down office
-Only 48% of the participants administered the full 450v shock

38
Q

How does proximity affect obedience?

A

-The closer we are to the consequences of our actions, the less likely we are to obey as we can see the potential harm of our behaviour

39
Q

How does proximity link to the variations?

A

-Milgram variation-teacher had to force learners’ hand onto the shock plate
-ONly 30% administered the full 450v shock