Ash and variables affecting conformity Flashcards
procedure
- looked at lines of different lengths
- took turns to call out which of the 3 lines was the same length as the standard line
- real participant always answered 2nd to last
- on 12/18 trails the confederates were told to give the same wrong answer.
background of Asch’s study
- volunteers thought they were taking part in a visual discrimination task
- all but 1 of the participants were really confederates
- real aim of study was to see how the real participant would react to the behaviour of the confederates
findings
-on the 12 critical takes, the conformity rate was 33%
-1/4 of the participants never conformed on any of the critical trails
-1/20 of the participants conformed on all 12 critical trails.
-to conform that the stimulus lines were obvious there was a control condition without the distraction of confederates giving wrong answers.
-in this condition participants made mistakes 1% of the time.
-
what happened when Asch interviewed the participants afterwards?
-the majority of participants who conformed had continued privately to trust their own perceptions, but changed their behaviour by giving incorrect answers to avoid disapproval from the other members
explain the effect of the group size variable on conformity
- little conformity when majority consisted of 1 or 2 confederates.
- when there was 3 confederates conformity increased to 30%
- further increases in the size of the majority did not increase conformity levels, indicating that the size of the majority is important but only up to a point.
explain the effect of the unanimity of the majority on conformity
-when the real participant was given the support of either another real participant or a confederate conformity levels dropped, to just 5.5%
explain the effect of the difficulty of the task and levels of conformity
- in the condition where the differences between the line lengths were much smaller the level of conformity increased.
explain the limitation that Asch’s research may be ‘a child of it’s time’
- Asch’s findings unique as took place when the US was in the grip of McCarthyism (a strong anti-communist period when people were scared to go against majority so likely to conform more)
- Perrin and Spencer did a Asch like study in the uk in the 1980 and they obtained only one conforming response out of the 396 trials
explain the limitation that there are problems with determining the effect of group size
- Bong suggests a limitation of research in conformity is that studies have only used a limited range of majority sizes.
- Investigators stay with Asch’s conclusion that 3 is theybest majority size.
- Bond points out that no other studies (apart from Asch’s) have used a majority size greater than 9 and in other conformity studies the range of majority sizes used are smaller (between 2 and 4)
- this means we know very little about the effect of larger majority sizes on conformity levels
explain the limitation of unconvincing confederates
- it would have been difficult for the confederates to act convincingly when giving the wrong answer. This proposes problems for the validity of the study.
- Mori and Arai over came this problem by making the participants were glasses with special filters.
- 3 participants in each group wore identical glasses and the 4th wore a different pair.
- this meant tat they judged a different (to the rest of the group) comparison line matched to the standard line.
- for female participants the results were the same as Asch’s. Suggests confederates in original study were convincing.
explain the limitation of cultural differences in conformity
- Smith analysed results of Asch type studies across different cultures.
- average conformity rate across different cultures was 31.2%
- average conformity rate for individual cultures (Europe and us) was 25%
- average conformity rate for collectivist cultures (Africa, Asia) was 37%.
- it has been suggested that a high level on conformity arises in collectivist cultures because it is viewed more favourable, binds the communities together.