Conformity to social roles Flashcards

1
Q

What are social roles?

A
  • the ‘parts’ people play in various social groups
  • expectations of what we and others think is acceptable behaviour for these social roles
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2
Q

Zimbardos research

A
  • 1970
  • wanted to know why prison guards behaved brutally
  • sadistic personality or social roles
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3
Q

The stanford prison experiment (SPE) (1973): basics

A
  • set up mock prison in basement of psychology department of stanford university
  • found 21 men who were ‘emotionally stable’
  • randomly assigned prisoner or guard
  • encouraged to conform to their social roles
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4
Q

The stanford prison experiment (SPE): uniform

A
  • prisoners were given a loose mock and cap to cover their hair
  • identifiable by their numbers
  • guards had a wooden club, handcuffs and mirror shades
  • created loss of individual identity (deindividuation) more likely to conform
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5
Q

The stanford prison experiment (SPE): instructions about behaviour

A
  • encouraged to identify by several procedures
  • rather than leaving the study early pp could ‘apply for parole’
  • guards were reminded that they had complete control over prisoners
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6
Q

Findings related to social roles: guards

A
  • took up roles with enthusiasm, treating prisoners harshly
  • 2 days= prisoners rebelled: shouted and swore at guards and ripped their uniforms
  • used ‘divide and rule tactics’ against the prisoners
  • harassed them and reminded them they were powerless
  • identified more closely with their social roles
  • looked to enjoy it
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7
Q

conclusions related to social roles

A
  • social roles have strong influence over conformity
  • guards= brutal, prisoners= submissive
  • roles easily taken on by all pp
  • volunteers who were there to play certain functions started acting as if they were in a prison rather than study
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8
Q

Findings related to social roles: prisoners

A
  • when rebellion finished prisoners= subdued depressed and anxious
  • one released because showed symptoms of psychological disturbance
  • 2+ released on 4th day
  • 1 went on hunger strike, force fed him and punished him by putting him in the ‘hole’
  • ended study in 6 days rather than 14
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9
Q

Evaluation strength: control

A
  • control over key variables
  • selecting emotionally stable pp= ruled out individual personality differences
  • this increased the internal validity of the study
  • more confident drawing conclusions
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10
Q

Evaluation limitation: Lack of realism

A
  • Banuazizi and Movahedi argued pp were play acting
  • performances were based off stereotypes of the social roles
  • one of the guard claimed he based his roles off Cool Hand Luke
  • explain why prisoners rioted
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11
Q

Evaluation COUNTER: Lack of Realism

A
  • McDermott argues they did act as if the prison was real to them
  • 90% of pp convos were on prison life
  • talked about how it was impossible to leave until their sentences were over
  • ‘prisoner 416’ said they thought prison was a real one ran by psychologists rather than the gov
  • SPE did replicate the roles which gave the study a high degree of internal validity
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12
Q

Evaluation limitation: Exaggerates the power of the roles

A
  • 1/3 of guards acc performed in a brutal manner
  • 1/3 tried apply the rules fairly
  • the rest tried to help and support the prisoners
    -most guards able to resist social pressures to conform to a brutal roles
  • overstated pp conforming to social roles, minimized influence of individual factors
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