L8- Social psychological explanations of aggression- Deindividuation Flashcards
define deindividuation
psychological state of mind when an individual loses their personal identity and takes on the identity of a social group e.g in crowd or a uniform= result could be decreased concern about the evaluation of others
Crowd Behaviour
-deindividuation CONCEPT first used by Gustave le bon to explain behaviour of individuals in crowds
- usually, easily identified= behaviour constrained by social norms
- crowd= lose restraint, freedom to behave out of ordinary
- lose sense of individual self-identity and responsibility for behaviour
-disregard norms + even laws
- responsibility becomes shared by crowd- less personal guilt about harmful agg to others
who coined the term deindividuation
Festinger
what can deindividuation be used to explain
violence in prisons and sporting events- large numbers of people in close proximity to each other
Zimbardo
- distinguished between individuated and deindividuated behaviour
- individuated behaviour= rational, normative
- deindividuated= emotional, impulsive, irrational, disinhibited and anti-normative- lose self-awareness, stop monitoring and regulating behaviour- ignore social norms- failing to form long term plans
Conditions for de-individuation which promote aggresive behaviour
drugs,alcohol,darkness,uniforms,masks,disguises
- major factor= anonymity
Dixon and Mahendran- anonymity
-‘anonymity shapes crowd behaviour’
- less fear of retribution- small and unidentifiable part of crowd
- bigger crowd= more anonymous
- anonymity prevents us from being judged negatively
- greater likelihood of aggression
Prentice-Dunn and Rogers
- inceased liklihood of agg not due to anonymity directly, but consequences
- 2 types of self-awareness
private self-awareness
- how we pay attention to our own feelings and behaviour
- reduced when part of crowd
- attention focused outwardly to events around us- pay less attention to our own beliefs and feelings
- less self-critical, less thoughtful= promotes deindividuation state
public self-awarness
- how much we care about what other people think of our behaviour
-reduced in crowds- realise we are one individual among many
-anonymous and behaviour less likely to be judged by others
-no longer care about others perception- become less accountable for agg actions
Research on deindividuation
Dodd:
- 229 undergrad psych students
- asked ‘if you could do anything humanly possible with complete assurance you would not be detected or held responsible, wwyd?
- 3 independent raters rated responses- antisocial or not
- 36% antisocial, 26% criminal
- demonstrates connection between deindividuation as a result of anonymity, and subsequent aggression
Evaluation of deindividuation
+ research support- Diener, kids on halloween
+research support- Malmouth+check- rape
+research support- Johnson+downing- KKK + shocks
- difficult to separate effects of deindividuation from other explanations
- deindividuated behaviour actually normative, not anti-normative
Strengths
+ Diener- natural experiment- halloween, concealed raters observed 1300 child trick or treaters under diff conditions 1. anonymity 2. non-anonymity 3. alone/group- given opportunity to steal sweets + money- group + anonymous stole most 57%, 21% in identifiable= anonymous+group= more likely to behave socially deviant way
+ Malmouth+Check- North america- asked uni students question ‘would u rape if would not be caught?’- 35% said yes- deindivduation can = agg behaviour
+ Johnson + Downing- lab experiment- 3 conditions- 1. female participants dressed KKK type outfit (entirely masked) 2. nurses 3. normal clothes- give (fake) shocks to confederate- KKK outfits= much higher levels vs other groups= when disguised, even if aren’t part of group= more likely to behave agg
Weaknesses
- difficult to separate effects of deindividuation from other explanations (SLT)- e.g. football- large crowds, history of violence + agg- on pitch + fans- BUT rugby , cricket also crowds- no violence= agg better explained by cultural factors, internalised through SLT
- deindivudated behaviour normative not anti-normative- theory states we behave against norms when less aware of private identity- SIDE model= argues deindividuation leads to behaviour conforming to GROUP norms- pro-social or anti-social- happens bc private identity shifts to social identity= sensitive to group norms, not ignoring