Asch Flashcards
1
Q
ASCH: A03 - Lack of mundane relaism
A
- artificiality of the task and its trivial nature
- Unlikely participants would have felt strongly about the task, judging the length of a line is not emotive issue
- In a real-life situation conforming may involve compromise of the person’s values
-Someone less likely to conform due to normative pressures in an everyday situation - Asch may have over-estimated conformity his results are not necessarily generalisable.
2
Q
ASCH: A03 - Useful application and potentially beneficial to society.
A
- Members of jury may feel pressured to conform through NSI, lead to a miscarriage of justice
-Knowledge used by the courts to
make jurors aware of importance of being able to cast vote privately, not say it publicly. Reduce pressure each jury member feels to conform.
-Result in a fairer verdict.
HOWEVER Asch’s can also be used in a less positive way: - AD’s seek to increase revenue, use principles of NSI.
- make customers want to buy their products
- consider this ethically unsound, means SI research is used to manipulate the general public for financial gain.
3
Q
ASCH: A03 - Cultural bias
A
- Smith & Bond analysed studies using an Asch type procedure
- found collectivist cultures conform more than
individualist cultures. - Perrin & Spencer replicated
Asch’s study on engineering students, did not find
support for conformity effect. - cultural dif.
- Asch’s research carried out in individualist culture, expect less conformity due to value placed on independence/ autonomy in culture.
- collectivist culture expect more conformity due to the
importance on inter-dependence / being part of a
group. - Asch’s results may not generalise to non-western cultures.
- Perrin & Spencer finding reflect a lack of temporal validity, carried out nearly thirty after Asch’s.
- conclude that conformity within our own society has diminished over that time.