obedience - Milgram's research Flashcards
obedience definition
a form of social influence in which an individual follows a direct order. the person issuing the order is usually a figure of authority, who has the power to punish when obedient behavior is not forthcoming
Hoffling et al study on disobedience of nurses
-1966
-arranged for an unknown doctor to phone 22 nurses and ask each of them alone to administer an overdose of a drug that was not on their ward list. 95% (21 out of 22) started to administer the drug (they were prevented from continuing). the nurses obeyed without question
Rank and Jacobson 1977 nurse study
-replicated Hoffling et al study but altered some aspects of the original procedure that might have maximised obedience
-as an order over the phone is unusual the doctors name was known so nurses could discuss order with each other
-nurses told to admister valium a drug which they would be familar with unlike the other study
-only 2 out of 18 obeyed
Milgram’s sample
40 men aged 20-50 from around New Haven USA
how were Milgram’s sample selected
volunteered through a newspaper advert or mailshoot, they were paid $4.50 for participating
outline Milgram’s procedure
the learner (mr wallace) was strapped into a chair and wired up with electrodes. the teacher (real participant) was given a small shock themselves. the learner had to remember a pair of words, each time he made an error, the teacher gave an increasingly strong electric shock by pressing switches on a shock machine (shocks were fake but teacher did not know this). switches were labeled from slight shock through intense shock to danger-severe shock. when the teacher got to 300V the learner pounded on the wall and gave no response to next question. at 315V he pounded on the wall and was then silent for the rest of procedure. the experimenter used 4 standard prods to order the teacher to continue
what were the 4 standard prods the experimenter used to order the teacher to continue
-prod 1 –> please continue/ please go one
-prod 2 –> the experiment requires that you continue
-prod 3 –> it is absolutely essential that you continue
-prod 4 –> you have no other choice, you must go one
when was Milgram’s baseline
1963
what did Milgram’s baseline assess
obedience levels
how were Milgram’s findings compared
procedure was later adapted in variations and baseline findings were used to make comparisons
how did Milgram decide who was teacher and who was experimenter
when each volunteer arrived they were introduced to another participant who was actually a confederate. they drew lots to see who would be teacher and learner, the draw was fixed so the participant was always the teacher
who was the experimenter
a confederate dressed in a grey lab coat
what did Milgram’s participants think the study was on
memory
aim of Milgram’s study
assess obedience in a situation where an authority figure (experimenter) ordered a participant (teacher) to give an increasingly strong shock (15V-450V) to a learner in a different room. the shocks were fake but the teacher did not know this
Milgram’s baseline findings
-every participant delivered all shocks up to 300V
-12.5% (5 participants) stopped at 300V which was an ‘intense shock’
-65% continued to the highest level of 450V so were fully obedient
-participants showed signs of extreme tension as many of them began to sweat, tremble, stutter, bite their lips, groan and dig their fingernails into their hands
-3 participants had seizures