contemporary study Flashcards
state the name of the contemporary study
Burger (2009)
state the aim of Burger’s study
to develop a variation of Milgram’s procedures allowing comparison with the original investigation while protecting the well-being of pp’s and examine whether situational factors affect obedience to an authoritative figure
state the procedures of burger’s study regarding the pp’s
- no one with knowledge of Milgram’s study was used
- 29 men and 41 women
- aged 20-81
- pp’s were paid $50
- two step screening process to exclude anyone who may react negatively to experiment so no one with history of mental problems accepted (this excluded 38% of pp’s who were paid in full) ->
step1: pp’s asked if they had any medical conditions that might be affected by stress
step2: interviewed by clinical psychologist
state the procedures of burger’s study particular the the actual experiment
- the maximum shock was 150V, the level at which the learner first cries in pain in order to protect pp’s from intense distress
- pp’s told 3 times, once in writing, that they could withdraw from the experiment at any time and still keep the $50
-pp’s only received a real 15V shock - experimenter was clinical psychologist who could stop procedure at any point
- leaner entered the room to reassure the pp’s he was fine and shocks weren’t real
results of burger’s study
- 70% of pp’s obeyed to 150V
- 65% men 73% women went to 150V so very little gender difference
- point at which both genders needed their first prod was similar
- the majority following orders refused to take responsibility for learner’s safety
conclusion of burger’s study
it is possible to replicate Milgram’s study in a way that is non-harmful to pp’s. Obedience rates have not changed dramatically in the last 50 years - time and changes in society’s culture did not have an effect on obedience levels.
strengths of burger’s study
- permits obedience research to be conducted, hadn’t been possible for decades, taking account ethical concerns of baseline study, and took measures to ensure pp safety eg. screening process + pp informed 3 times they could withdraw
- other ethical considerations e.g. pp were only given 15V shock rather than 45V + clinical psychologist as experimenter instructed to stop experiment if they detected excessive signs of stress
- population validity: included diverse sample of ages, ethnicities and women.
weaknesses of burger’s study
- pp still deliberately put in situation that would cause anxiety and the verbal prods removed their right to withdraw
- change in procedure of 450 to 150V do not allow for clear comparison of results, only partial replication and can only be assumed pp would carry on after 150V
- may not generalise real world bc carried out in lab e.g. atrocities committed through history involve many more complex factors than blind obedience to authority
-task validity: unlike real-life obedience to shock someone…