(1) ๐Ÿง‘โ€๐Ÿง‘โ€๐Ÿง’โ€๐Ÿง’ types of and explanations for conformity Flashcards

1
Q

who identified the 3 levels/types of conformity, and in what year?

A

Kelman (1958)

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2
Q

what are the three types of conformity, and what are there levels

A

โ€ข compliance (shallow)

โ€ข identification (intermediate)

โ€ข internalisation (deep)

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3
Q

what is compliance?

A

โ€ข shallow level

โ€ข individual externally agrees with group but keeps personal opinions = temp change in behaviour

โ€ข eg: being pressured into drinking alcohol by friends when you donโ€™t truly want to.

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4
Q

what is identification?

A

โ€ข intermediate level

โ€ข process of adopting behaviour and beliefs of group externally and sometimes privately, as membership is valued

โ€ข acting more professional and less silly when you arrive at your office to work.

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5
Q

what is internalisation?

A

โ€ข deep level

โ€ข personal opinions genuinely change to match the group, resulting in permanent change.

โ€ข being brought up in a religious household, and becoming religious yourself

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6
Q

what is the two-process theory of conformity; who created it?

A
  • Deutsch and Gerard (1955)
  • suggesting conformity stems from two central human needs: the need to be right (informational social influence), and the need to be liked (normative social influence)
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7
Q

what is informational social influence?

A

When ones uncertainty about correct behaviour in certain situations leads to looking to the majority for guidance; aiming for correctness and resulting in internalisation.

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8
Q

what is normative social influence?

A

โ€ข Type of compliance

โ€ข Driven by desire to appear normal and gain approval, therefore individuals will conform to group norms temporarily to avoid rejection.

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9
Q

โœ… - supporting evidence for ISI + ๐Ÿฆ„

A
  • Jenness (1932)
  • E: Ps estimated jellybeans alone. discussed with group. another guess alone. second guesses aligned closer to groupโ€™s estimate.
  • E: task ambiguity adjusted judgments based on group opinions, real life applications: reliance on othersโ€™ judgment in unfamiliar situations
  • C: low ecological validity. controlled lab experiment in artificial environment, doesnโ€™t accurately mirror real-life situations where social influence naturally occurs, limits generalisability
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10
Q

โœ… - supporting evidence for NSI + ๐Ÿฆ„

A

โ€ข Asch (1951)

โ€ข E: Ps conformed to incorrect answers in an unambiguous line length test. during post-interview, reported conforming to avoid rejection

โ€ข E: people display compliant behavior for social approval, social influence can significantly shape behavior.

โ€ข C: low ecological validity. artificial stimuli in controlled lab experiment, which lacked mundane realism, not representative of real life situations.

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11
Q

โŒ - some individuals exhibit varying levels of resistance to social pressures to conform.

A

E: internal locus of control less susceptible to SI as hold strong personal control and reliance on own judgments.

E: difficult to generalise findings on the responses to social influence scenarios across diff people or situations as personality differences must be accounted for in order to understand and predict behavior accurately.

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12
Q

๐Ÿง 

for a03, there are 2 studies mentioned with counterpoints. after naming the researcher, summaries their study.

A

โ€ข strength - Jenesse ISI (1932)

> ambiguous jelly bean estimations alone and then discussed. guesses aligned with groups estimate
๐Ÿฆ„ > low ecological - controlled lab experiment, artifical environment, not accurate mirror of real life situations, limits applicability

โ€ข strength - Milgram NSI (1951)

> unambiguous line test

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