4.1.1 Social influence Flashcards
What is conformity?
Yielding to group pressure
When does conformity occur?
When individual’s behaviour/beliefs are influenced by larger group of people (majority)
Name 3 types of conformity (from weakest to strongest)
- Compliance
- Identification
- Internalisation
Describe compliance
- When individual changes their behaviour/opinion to match those of group to gain acceptance and avoid disapproval
- Occurs ∵ individual wants to fit in
- Involves public change of behaviour but private thoughts don’t change
- Temporary form conformity displayed in front of group (never happens when individual is alone)
Give an example of compliance
e.g. laughing at a joke you don’t understand ∵ rest of group is laughing
Describe Identification
- When individual changes their behaviour/opinion publicly and privately to match the group’s
- ∵ they want be a member of the group
- Conformity temporary = only maintained when individual is within group
Give an example of identification
e.g. When individual joins the army, they adopt beliefs of their fellow soldiers but when they leave the army, they may adopt new beliefs/behaviours
Describe Internalisation
- When individual permanently changes their behaviour/beliefs to group’s
- Individual believes group’s belief is correct = public and private change
Give an example of internalisation
e.g. individual becomes a vegetarian = won’t eat meat even when group isn’t there
Name 2 explanations for conformity
- Informational Social Influence (ISI)
- Normative Social Influence (NSI)
Describe normative social influence (NSI)
- Occurs when we want to accepted, liked and respected by the majority
- And to avoid disapproval, rejection (is painful)
- To ensure this to agree with majority publicly, even though we may disagree privately and internally
- Linked to compliance
When are people likely to conform to NSI? (3x)
- Group is important to us ∴ we want to be seen as apart of it → conforming is easy way to do this
- People will conform to majority when majority is large
- Results in more pressure and greater need to be accepted
- People will conform when they see that it may cost them not to
Describe informational social influence (ISI)
- Occurs when individual are unsure how to behave in particular situation → look to opinions/behaviours of group to form their own opinions on how they should behave/act
- Linked to internalisation ∵ results in private acceptance of group’s opinion
- Occurs mostly in unfamiliar situations → conforming to crowd = safe option, avoids standing out from majority
When are people likely to conform to ISI? (3x)
- If situation is ambiguous
- In an emergency
- Look to majority for information on best cause of action
- If we believe major are experts
Name a key study that supports normative social influence (NSI)
Asch (1955)
Asch (1955)
State the aim
To create an unambiguous task to investigate the extent to which individuals will conform to a majority who give obviously wrong answers
Asch (1955)
Describe the procedure
- Male student volunteers → believed it a test of vision
- Shown stimulus line & 3 other lines = A, B or C
- Asked one by one to say which of 3 lines (A, B or C) matched original stimulus line
- All confederates expect 1 student = gave same correct answer for 1st 6 trails & incorrect answers for 12 trails
- Real participant always answered last/second
Asch (1955)
Describe the findings (4x)
- In control trials (no confederates) = 0.7% (incorrect answers)
- In critical trials = over 1/3 (conformed to majority groups incorrect answer)
- 75% of real participants conformed at least once
- NSI most common reason for conforming
Asch (1955)
State the conclusion
- Majority influence does affect individual
- Conform even when majority is wrong
- Individual differences
- in the extent to which individuals are influenced by majority
- Wanted to fit in
- ∵ many participants conformed publicly but their private thoughts unchanged
Name 3 cons of Asch’s (1955) study
- Time consuming & expensive
- Only one real participant was tested at time
- Lacks ecological validity
- Don’t tell us about conformity in real world
- Very rare to disagree so fundamentally with someone over ‘correct’ answer in real life
- Unrepresentative
- Only test American male college students ∴ findings only represent that group of people
- 1950 USA = known for being conformist ∴ results may not present today’s society/other cultures
Name a pro of Asch’s (1955) study
- Asch’s methods for studying conformity has been adopted by many other researchers
- Now established way of performing conformity research
- The basic procedure
Name the 2 key studies for informational social influence (ISI)
- Jenness (1932)
- Sherif (1935)
Jenness (1932)
Method
- Participants had to estimate the no. of jelly beans in jar & then discussed estimates in either large group or several smaller groups
- Group estimates were then arrived at & individuals made 2nd estimate guess individually
Jenness (1932)
Findings
- When individuals asked to make 2nd estimate = significant convergence towards group estimate
- All conformed with majority opinion
- Females conformed more than males
Jenness (1932)
Conclusion
Ambiguous/unfamiliar situations lead to judgements being affected by majority viewpoint
Sherif (1935)
Method
- Placed participants in dark room & showed them optical illusion → auto-kinetic effect
- Illusion shows point of light moving
- Estimated how far light moved 1st individually, then as group & finally individually again
Sherif (1935)
Findings
- Participants changed their initial individual estimate when working in the group
- When estimating individually (2nd), participants changed their estimates to reflect group’s estimate
Evaluate Jenness’ (1932) and Sherif’s (1935) study
- Both studies conducted under lab settings
- Demand characteristics as participants knew they were being observed
- Lack mundane realism
- Trying estimate movement of light/no. of jellybeans in jar = unrealistic to real world situations where ISI could occur
- Participants were deceived - raises ethical issues
- Could agree deception was minor and needed for realistic results
Name 4 evaluation points for NSI
- Support from Asch’s Interviews
- Asch’s variation
- Hogg and Tuner (1987)
- Explains bullying
NSI
Elaborate on evaluation point: Explains bullying (when kid is uncomfortable with it)
- Children with few friends = greater need for social acceptance
- = more likely to comply to pressure from bullying group to victimise another kid
- By conforming, child feels accepted by bullying majority regardless of their private beliefs
NSI
Elaborate on evaluation point: Hogg and Tuner (1987)
- Did conformity experiment similar to Asch & found conformity to wrong answer occurred when people were in group of friends
- Supports NSI = people conform ∵ group was important to them
NSI
Elaborate on evaluation point: Asch’s variation
- People conformed less when group was small (what NSI predicts)
- When 2 confederate = 13%
- People conform if group is large
- Group had 3 confederates and 1 participant = conformity 33%
NSI
Elaborate on evaluation point: Support from Asch’s Interviews
- Interviews with Asch’s participants showed they knew right answer but conformed ∵ of fear of ridicule
- Supports NSI = suggests we conform to accepted & avoid rejection
- Participants said “I didn’t want to look stupid”
Name 4 evaluation points for ISI
- Jeness’ study
- Asch’s variation experiment
- Wittenbrink & Henly (1996)
- Sherif’s study
ISI
Elaborate on evaluation point: Asch’s variation experiment
- Made task harder (comparison lines more similar) = conformity increased
- Participant unsure of correct answer = look to group for correct answer
ISI
Elaborate on evaluation point: Wittenbrink & Henly (1996)
- White participants who were exposed to negative information about African Americans that they believed view of majority
- = increased the score they received on prejudice scale
- Suggests they conformed to majority ∵ they believe them to be correct
Name 3 factors that affect conformity
- Group Size
- Unanimity
- Task Difficulty
Describe how group size affects conformity
Use Asch’s variations to back up your answer
Majority group size ↑ = conformity ↑ but only up to certain point
- Asch Findings
- 1 confederate = 3%
- 2 confederates = 13%
- 3 confederates + 1 participant = 33%
- Up to 15 confederates = no increase on conformity
- Conformity highest = 3-5 person majority
Describe how unanimity affects conformity
Use Asch’s variations to back up your answer
Asch Findings
- All confederates gave same incorrect response → conformity = 33%
- Some confederates gave correct answer
- Conformity = 5.5%
- If confederate went against both participant & other confederates → conformity = 9%
- Conclusion: Breaking unanimity through different POV = reduces conformity
Describe how task difficulty affects conformity
Use Asch’s variations to back up your answer
Task difficulty ↑ = conformity ↑ due to ISI
- Increased difficulty of “line experiment” = lines similar in length
- Conformity increased expect for those who had high levels of self-efficacy
- Shows how situational variables (task difficulty) & individual differences (self-efficacy) = plays key role in conformity
Zimbardo’s Prison Study
State the aim
To investigate how readily people would conform to roles of guard & prisoner in role-playing exercise that stimulated prison life
Zimbardo’s Prison Study
Describe the procedure
- Recruited male university students
- Asked for volunteers in study investigating prison life
- Basement of Stanford university converted into mock prison
- Study scheduled to last 2 weeks
- Students assessed as being mentally and physically stable with no criminal tendencies were chosen
- Social roles randomly allocated
- 11 = prisoners
- 10 = guards
- Social roles randomly allocated
- Prisoners” arrested by real police officers at home
- Were deloused, given prison uniform & ID number
- Guards wore khaki uniforms, reflective sunglasses (preventing eye contact) & given handcuffs, batons and keys
- Prisoners allowed certain rights e.g. 3 meals per day
- Each cell was allocated 3 prisoners
Zimbardo’s Prison Study
Describe the findings
- Prisoners and guards settled into their roles
- Guards became more abusive and tyrannical
- Dehumanisation
- Guards taunted prisoners and woke them at night to carry out demeaning jobs e.g. cleaning toilets with their bare hands
- Prisoners = submissive & didn’t question guard’s behaviour
- Some sided with guards against other prisoners who rebelled
- De-individuation
- Referred to others by ID’s rather than names
- 5 prisoners released early
- Displayed extreme behaviour e.g. crying, anxiety, rage
- Study stopped after 6 days
- Significant harm was being caused by aggressive behaviour of guards & submissive behaviour of prisoners
Zimbardo’s Prison Study
Name 2 postive evaluation points
- Abu Grahib
- Control over variables
Zimbardo’s Prison Study
Name 2 negative evaluation points
- Demand characteristics
- Unethical
Zimbardo’s Prison Study
Elaborate on the postive evaluation point: Abu Grahib (military prison)
- Guards who committed abuse were victims of situational factors that made the abuse more likely
- e.g. lack of training, no accountability to higher authority
- Led guards to abuse Iraqi prisoners
- Shows Zimbardo’s research can explain real life conformity to social roles