social influence Flashcards

1
Q

definition of conformity

A

yielding to group pressure

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2
Q

what are the 3 types of conformity ?

A

• internalisation - deep type of conformity (change to match group as you believe in what your doing)
• compliance - shallow type of conformity (change to match group and keep your views in secret)
• identification - conform to social roles you have been given (leave this role your behaviour go back to normal)

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3
Q

in explanations of conformity what is normative influence ?

A

conform in order to accept the group
• supported by Asch’s research as he found that participants purposefully said the wrong answer to match the group
• Deutsch and Gerrard support that most likely to happen when part of a group (conformity rates higher)

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4
Q

in explanations of conformity what is informational social influence ?

A

conform for information- don’t know the answer so we answer the same as the group
• Lucas et al support when he found that conformity rates were higher when the tasks were harder
• Baumesiter et al (2012) study in which confederate told a participant to drive faster or slower - continued when driving alone - suggests they thought the confederate to be more knowledgeable

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5
Q

Asch’s research into conformity …

A

aims - if people conform, and give wrong answer to easy task
carried out - American collage students, individually - line length test
findings - 74% participants conformed at least once , average conformity rate was 32% , they didn’t wanna be rejected from the group
conclusion - pressure to conform is strong

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6
Q

evaluation for Asch’s research into conformity ?

A

~ unethical - participants deceived to the true nature of the experiment (mild psychological harm due to anxiety and embarrassment)
~ low temporal validity - at the time a lot of pressure on Americans to fit in (higher rates than normal)
~ low ecological validity - artificial set up, meaning results might not apply to real life
~ influential - first of its kind to show just how strong the pressure to conform is

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7
Q

what are the variables affecting conformity ?

A

~ group size - larger the group the greater conformity, easier to disagree with a smaller group
~ unanimity - Asch found if one confederate disagrees with the majority, conformity for the genuine participant decreases dramatically
~ task difficulty - in general harder tasks produce greater conformity

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8
Q

what is a conformity to social roles ?

A

a social role could be a job or an identity - when we have a social role we change our behaviour to fit what is expected of the role

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9
Q

what is Zimbardo’s research ?

A

~ created a fake prison in basement of Stratford uni, randomly allocated student volunteers as prisoners or guards
~ he found that guards soon conformed to their role by asserting their authority over the prisoners - often involved subjecting them to u pleasant and degrading tasks
experiment had to be stopped after 5 days

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10
Q

what is the evaluation of Zimbardo’s research ?

A

~ ethical concerns as the prisoners were subjected to physical and emotional abuse at hands of the guards (2 distressed had to leave)
~ concerns his approach was unscientific- didn’t plan study, making decisions at the spur of the moment
~ useful in understanding why people are similar in real world
~ findings are unreliable - Reicher and Haslam ran a similar study and didn’t find the same conformity to social roles

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11
Q

what is the difference between conformity and obedience ?

A

conformity - no direct pressure just pressure, influenced by peers, don’t like to admit this
obedience - direct order, influenced by those in position, happy to admit it

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12
Q

what is Milgram’s research ?

A

aims ~ see if ordinary people will harm another person if told so
how ~ participants tested individually, Yale university, with confederate, participant shock confederate started at 15 volts max was 450volts - wasn’t actually receiving the shocks- always had to continue even if they didn’t want to
findings ~ 65% went to 450volts, all went to 300volts
conclusion ~ people will obey to do things they don’t want to when it’s said through authority

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13
Q

what is the evaluation for Milgram’s research ?

A

~ study gave us an insight into human behaviour
~ unethical - deceived at every stage no informed consent showing psychological distress
~ low internal validity - if not believing the set up they would probably go along with what was expected
~ low ecological validity - not represent obedience in real world - Hofling et al nurses obeyed a fake doctor giving patients twice daily allowance of fake drugs

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14
Q

what is the agentic state and legitimacy of authority in explanations of obedience ?

A

when we don’t feel responsible for our own actions but are acting as the agent of someone in authority
~ Milgram found that obedience dropped from 65% to 20% when the orders were given by an ordinary person rather than someone with authority

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15
Q

what is proximity in explanations of obedience ?

A

obedience is higher when the person giving orders is closer to us - harder to disobey someone when they are face to face with you
~ Milgram found that obedience rates dropped from 65% to 23% when orders were given by phone also
- obedience has dropped from 65% to 40% when participants were in the same room as the person supposedly receiving the shocks

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16
Q

what is location in explanations of obedience ?

A

obedience is higher when the location seems more official - Milgram’s study originally was at Yale University when it was transferred to run down an office block obedience dropped from 65% to 48%

17
Q

what is uniform in explanations of obedience ?

A

obedience rates are higher when the person giving orders is wearing a uniform
~ Bickman asked people (in New York) to do minor things such as picking up litter - found that the rates were higher when the person giving orders wore an official looking guards uniform

18
Q

what is authoritarian personality in dispositional explanations of obedience ?

A

according to this idea people are blindly to obey if they have an authoritarian personality
~ research found that those with that personality are more likely to deliver more shocks in Milgram’s type study

19
Q

explanations of resistance to social influence by social support in conformity

A

see how conformity rates dripped when Asch introduced a non conformist confederate into his study - having another person who doesn’t go along with the group gives a person confidence to resist pressure to conform

20
Q

explanations of resistance to social influence by social support in obedience

A

in variations of Milgram had participants work alongside confederates when they refused to deliver shocks the rates dropped to 10%
~ Powers and Green (1972) found things little more complex, using Milgram style procedure they found that disobedient only had influence when they seemed calm - if they seemed anxious in disobeying the real participant was unaffected by them

21
Q

explanations of resistance to social influence of internal locus of control

A

people feel that they control their futures and recognise their efforts can influence their futures - these are less likely to conform or obey because of this belief

22
Q

explanations of resistance to social influence of external locus control

A

people feel that external factors such as fate and luck control their futures
~ more likely to conform and obey as they see themselves as powerless to control their own futures

23
Q

research of explanations of resistance to social influence

A

~ Holland found support - in a Milgram set up internals were more likely to disobey orders
~ Williams and Warchal found evidence against - didn’t find internals were less likely to conform, found a link between assertiveness and resisting social influence
~ Avtgis found positive correlation of 0.37 between external locus of control and conformity rates supporting the idea that internals are more likely to resist social influence
~ Schurtz used Milgram set up and didn’t find a link between internals and likelihood to disobey - find they took more responsibility of their actions

24
Q

what is minority influence ?

A

small group influencing the majority