Relationships - examine factors influencing bystanderism Flashcards
bystanderism
phenomenon of a person not intervening despite being aware of another person’s need
i.e. the phenomenon of remaining a bystander
factors affecting bystanderism
Latané and Darley (1968):
- diffusion of responsibility
- pluralistic ignorance
- evaluation apprehension
Pilliavin et al. (1969):
- potential costs and benefits of helping
- similarity
Levine et al. (2001):
- culture
Theory of the Unresponsive Bystander
Latané and Darley (1968) theorized that 3 factors were responsible for bystanderism:
- diffusion of responsibility: responsibility is diffused when
more bystanders are present, reducing the psychological costs of not intervening
- pluralistic ignorance: ambiguity of the situation leads to people emulating the behaviour of other bystanders
- evaluation apprehension: fear of social blunders – what if they misunderstood the situation – thereby preventing the bystanders from reacting
main study: Latané and Darley (1968)
Latané and Darley (1968)
- deceived university students into thinking they were participating in research about personal problems experienced by students
- one by one, each was led to one of many small rooms in a corridor and given instructions on how to use the microphone and headphones awaiting them
- they were told that other anonymous participants were being kept in separate rooms and that the researcher was not listening
- they were told to disclose problems in turn and take turns to comment on what had already been said
- but in fact, the voices the participant would hear were pre-recorded – there were no other people present
- the first voice mentioned that he experienced seizures sometimes, particularly when stressed
- other voices disclosed various irrelevant problems, with the real participant speaking last
- the first voice returned to comment and began to experience a seizure
- researchers measured time taken for the participant to leave the room to notify the experimenter
- the IV was the number of people the participant believed were also participating at the same time
- it was noted that when participants thought they were alone with the victim, 85% acted within two minutes compared to only 31% of those who thought there were four other participants
Latané and Darley (1968) - evaluation
- participant bias: all participants were psychology students
- low ecological validity: unrealistic that bystanders could only hear the victim
- ethical considerations: participants were deceived and exposed to an anxiety-provoking situation
Cost-Reward Model of Helping
Pilliavin et al (1969):
- cognitive (cost-benefit analysis) and emotional factors (unpleasant emotional arousal) determine whether bystanders intervene
- focuses on egoistic motivation to escape an unpleasant emotional state
- emotional arousal –> interpretation of arousal –> the interpretation serves as motivation to help (if help occurs)
- evaluates costs and rewards of helping, and costs and rewards of not helping
study: Pilliavin et al. (1969)
Pilliavin et al. (1969)
- the participants were unsuspecting subway travellers
- 4 conditions: drunk or ill, and black or white
- confederate ‘victim’ staged a collapse on the floor of a subway
- if no one helped the confederate, a second confederate (a ‘helper’) helped the victim up
- found that an ill person was more likely to be helped than a drunk person
- people were more likely to be helped up by others of the same race
the evidence contradicted the Latané and Darley (1968) theory of bystanderism in 2 ways:
- no support for diffusion of responsibility during trials as an ‘ill’ victim – observers could clearly see the victim and decide whether or not it was an emergency
- no support for pluralistic ignorance – number of bystanders had no effect on speed of helping
Pilliavin et al. (1969) - evaluation
- as a field study, it has higher ecological validity than laboratory studies
evaluation of the cost-reward model of helping
- model assumes that bystanders make a rational cost-benefit analysis rather than acting intuitively on impulse
- also assumes that people only help for egoistic motives
- assumptions are probably untrue