2.6.2 Social psychology & Milgram Flashcards

1
Q

what are social psychologists interested in?

A

social behaviour

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2
Q

give examples of research methods social psychologists use:

A

field experiments
self report
content analysis
controlled observations

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3
Q

when was milgrams research carried out?

A

1963

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4
Q

what was the aim of milgrams research?

A

to see how far people would go in obeying an instruction even when it involved harming another person

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5
Q

how was the sample of milgrams study selected?

A

self/volunteer - responded to newspaper ads

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6
Q

who were the participants?

A

40 males
aged 20 - 50
paid $4.50

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7
Q

who else were involved in the experiment?

A

learner (actor)

experimenter (actor)

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8
Q

where was the research carried out?

A

2 rooms at Yale

  1. had the learner and electric chair
  2. had teacher & experimenter with a shock generator
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9
Q

what did the procedure involve?

A

teacher asking learner to recall words, then shocked them when they got it wrong - increasing the voltage of the shock with each wrong answer

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10
Q

what did milgram find: how many participants went to 450v?

A

65% or two thirds

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11
Q

what voltage did all participants go to?

A

300v

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12
Q

conclusions: Ordinary people are likely to….

A

….follow orders given by authority figure even to the extent of killing

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13
Q

Conclusions: People obey orders from authority figure if…..

A

….they recognise that authority as being morally right

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14
Q

what does internal validity refer to?

A

whether the research actually measures what it claims to measure

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15
Q

what was an internal validity strength of milgrams procedure?

A

well standardised - everyone had the same experience

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16
Q

what was an internal validity strength of how obedience was operationalized?

A

accurately operationalized

by the voltage level the participants would give

17
Q

how did orne and Holland argue milgram’s research lacked internal validity?

A

participants must have realised the set up was fake - the experimenter didn’t check on the learner who was screaming in pain

18
Q

what did perry argue about the internal validity of milgram’s study?

A

participants knew they weren’t hurting anyone based upon a following questionnaire in which many said they were suspicious

19
Q

what is an argument against orne & Holland and Perry to say that milgrams study did have internal validity?

A

evidence came after debrief - they can fake answers but participants couldn’t fake reactions such as tears and panic attacks

20
Q

what were some of the subjects suspicions?

A

learners cries appeared to be coming from a speaker
check looked worn - used over and over
experimenters lack of concern

21
Q

what did post research interview show about the percentage of participants who believed they were giving real shocks?

A

75% believed they were giving real shocks

22
Q

what is external validity?

A

can the findings be applied to outside the research setting?

23
Q

why did milgrams study lack ecological validity? (external validity)

A

artificial test - controlled

didn’t reflect obedience in everyday world

24
Q

why does milgram’s study lack population validity?

A

findings only apply to male americans

25
what is mundane realism? was milgrams experiment high or low in it? (external validity)
the extent to which a situation reflects real life | LOW
26
what is experimental realism? was milgrams experiment high or low in it? (external validity)
so engrossed in research study they forget its artificial and actually show real behaviour HIGH
27
what have replications of milgrams experiment found? (external validity strength)
high levels of obedience across sex & nationality
28
ethics: why did milgram's study not break ethical guidelines?
they didn't exist at the time
29
ethics: how were milgram's participants deceived?
told the aim was punishment and learning when it was obedience actors faking reactions fake shocks
30
why mighty milgram have argued deception was necessary?
to avoid demand characteristics
31
why did milgram's study have a lack of full informed consent?
aim was lied about fake shocks participants didn't have full knowledge couldn't give full consent
32
how did milgram overcome the issue of full informed consent?
retro active consent - asked participants after if they would consent once they understood the research presumptive consent - asking people on street
33
how were participants not protected from harm?
distressed thinking they were harming the learner panic attacks have to live with the knowledge they could kill someone
34
how did milgram overcome the issue of not protecting participants from harm?
thorough debrief counselling asked how they felt about participating - 80% said they were glad and thought more research should be done
35
who was the learner?
47 year old irish American (actor)
36
who was the experimenter and what did he say to the teacher if they tried to stop?
31 year old actor | "please continue" "you must go on"
37
what were participants told the aim of the experiment was?
investigating learning and punishment