Milgram's study Flashcards

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1
Q

Why was milgram interested in obedience?

A

Milgram’s parents were jews during ww2 and he was interested in figuring out why most of the Nazi party were so obedient

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2
Q

What is obedience?

A

obeying an order or command from a legitimate figure of authority

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3
Q

What was the aim of Milgram’s study?

A

To investigate what level of obedience participants would go to when asked to deliver electric shocks to someone by a legitimate authority figure

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4
Q

What research method was Milgram’s study? Why?

A

Officially it was a controlled observation because there was no independent or dependent variable

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5
Q

What was the sample like in Milgram’s study?

A

40 males aged 20-50 from the new haven area and a range of occupations

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6
Q

What sampling method did Milgram use to obtain his sample? and what specifically did he do?

A

He used a self selecting sampling method by putting an ad in the newspaper.

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7
Q

What is a weakness of Milgram’s way of obtaining his sample?

A

As all the participants volunteered themselves, they would all be fairly outgoing or extroverted, meaning he might not have gotten a representative sample

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8
Q

What is a strength of Milgram’s way of obtaining his sample?

A

It was an extremely easy method of obtaining participants because all milgram had to do was out the ad in the paper

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9
Q

What were the weaknesses of Milgram’s sample?

A

The size of the sample was limited and all of the participants were from the same place, so the results may not have been reflective of the wider population.

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10
Q

What were the strengths of Milgram’s sample?

A

They were all of different ages and occupations. They were all of a similar age to the soldiers in the Nazi party in WW2.

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11
Q

What were the controls in Milgram’s study?

A

The prods and instructions from the experimenter
Strapping Mr Wallace to the electric chair
recorded messages from Mr Wallace
Number and order of right and wrong answers
All participants were given the trial electric shock of 45 volts

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12
Q

What are three examples of the ‘prods’ given by the experimenter in Milgram’s study?

A

The experiment requires that you continue
you have no other choice but to continue
please continue

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13
Q

What were the quantitative results of Milgram’s study?

A

100% of participants went to 300 volts
65% went all the was to 450 volts (26 participants)

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14
Q

In Milgram’s study, what happened at and after 300 volts were reached?

A

at 300 volts, the ‘learner’ banged on the wall and after that they didn’t answer any more questions

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15
Q

What are the areas of Milgram’s qualitative results?

A

signs of extreme stress
participant statements

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16
Q

Explain signs of extreme stress/tension as qualitative data in milgram’s study

A

There was video evidence of tension. Participants were observed to sweat, tremble, stutter, bite their lips, groan and dig their fingernails into their arms. 14 showed nervous laughter. 3 had seizures.

17
Q

What were the conclusions of Milgram’s study?

A

The situation produced strong tendencies to obey a legitimate authority figure.
The situation caused emotional strain and tension

18
Q

What are some potential explanations of the findings of Milgram’s study?

A

It took place at a prestigious university
there was separation between learner and teacher (wall)
Participants experienced cognitive conflict between their morals for not harming people and the tendency of humans to want to obey the perceived authority figure.

19
Q

What two ethical guidelines did Milgram uphold?

A

He debriefed the participants after the study, allowing them to give retrospective consent
He allowed them to reunite with the ‘learner’ and were offered therapy in an attempt to reduce psychological damage
He allowed them to withdraw, as 35% did leave before the end

20
Q

What five ethical guidelines did Milgram break? How?

A

Deception, consent, protection from harm, withdrawal, confidentiality

21
Q

How did Milgram break withdrawal guidelines?

A

He didn’t really give participants a chance to back out easily. Whenever participants expressed a desire to back out, the experimenter would respond with prods to keep them there, such as ‘you have no other choice but to continue

22
Q

How did Milgram break deception guidelines?

A

He deceived the participants many times during the experiment, and the entire experiment was a deception as participants thought that it was a study on how punishment affects learning

23
Q

How did Milgram break confidentiality guidelines?

A

He filmed participants and released those films to the public, potentially without their permission

24
Q

How did Milgram break protection from harm guidelines?

A

He caused the participants both severe psychological harm and physical harm as they were severely distressed and some had seizures.

25
Q

What happened before the official start of Milgram’s experiment?

A

The participants met the confederate (thinking that he was another participant) where he told them that he had a bad heart. The experimenter told them that this was a study to investigate the effects of punishment on learning. They ‘randomly’ selected who would be the ‘teacher’ (always the participant) and who would be the ‘learner’ (always Mr Wallace). The participant then helped to strap Mr Wallace into the chair and electrodes. They were then taken into the next rooms and given a trial shock of 45 volts.

26
Q

What happened after Milgram’s experiment?

A

All the participants were interviewed before a friendly reconciliation was arranged between the participant and Mr Wallace. The participants were all debriefed and an effort was made to reduce any tensions that arose.

27
Q

What are some examples of participant statements as qualitative data in Milgram’s study?

A

“I don’t think this is very humane”
“I’m going to chicken out. I’d like to continue, but i can’t do that to a man, i’ll heart his heart, you take your money”

28
Q

In Milgram’s study, when was the experiment considered as finished?

A

When the ‘teacher’ either reached 450 volts or refuses to continue

29
Q

What was the name of the task carried out by the ‘learner’ in Milgram’s study, and what did this entail?

A

A ‘word pair task’. The participant read out a list of word pairs and then the first word again followed by four options. The ‘learner’ had to select which of the four went with the first word.

30
Q

Describe the machine used in Milgram’s study

A

The electric shock generator had 30 switches in a horizontal line, each clearly labeled with the voltage ranging from 15 to 450 volts.

31
Q

What was the ratio of right to wrong answers in Milgram’s study?

A

three wrong answers to one right one

32
Q

What were the instructions given to the Participants in Milgram’s study?

A

They were told to ask the ‘learner’ the questions and every time they got a wrong answer, they had to read out the voltage level, then shock the learner. With each wrong answer, the voltage increased.

33
Q

What labels were given to the people who stayed vs left in Milgram’s study?

A

Those who stayed until the end (450 volts) were called obedient and those who left were called defiant

34
Q

Did Milgram’s study have Internal reliability?

A

Yes because it was all very standardised and each of the participants had the same procedure, room, actors etc

35
Q

Did Milgram’s study have external reliability?

A

Yes, because you can see a consistent effect that has been seen in replications of the study too

36
Q

Does Milgram’s study have External (ecological) reliability?

A

No, in no way is it true to life

37
Q

Does Milgram’s study have internal validity?

A

Yes, because they used the electric shock generator to measure obedience and all of the participants showed signs of severe distress and tension, therefore it was their obedience being measured.