Social Influence Flashcards
Social Influence
Process by which individuals and groups change each other’s attitudes and behaviours e.g. conformity, obedience and minority influence.
Conformity
A change in a person’s behaviour or opinions as a result of real or imagined pressure from a person or group of people.
Compliance
A superficial and temporary type of conformity where we outwardly go along with the majority view but privately disagree with it. Change in our behaviour only lasts as long as the group is monitoring us.
F-scale Test
A test of tendencies towards fascism, used to assess the authoritarian personality.
Binding Factors
Aspects of the situation that allow the person to ignore or minimise the damaging effect of their behaviour and thus reduce the ‘moral stain’ they are feeling.
Group Size (Asch)
Variation of Asch’s study. Conformity increased with group size but only up to a point, levelling off when majority was greater than 3.
My Lai Massacre
War crime during the Vietnam war. Unarmed civilians killed by American soldiers who were obeying lieutenant’s orders. Supports external validity of explanations of obedience.
Zimbardo (1973)
Mock Prison. Tests conformity to social roles.
Social Change
Occurs when the whole societies, rather than just individuals, adopt new beliefs, attitudes and ways of doing things. (1. drawing attention, 2. consistency & flexibility, 3. deeper processing, 4. augmentation principle, 5. snowball effect, 6. social cryptomnesia, 7. conformity/obedience)
Moscovici et al. (1969)
Blue and green slides. Tests minority influence.
Unanimity (Asch)
Variation of Asch’s study. The extent to which all the members of the group agree. Presence of anther non-conformer lowered conformity.
Informational Social Influence (ISI)
An explanation of conformity that says we agree with the opinion of the majority because we believe it is correct. We accept it because we want to be correct as well.
Augmentation Principle
If a person performs an action when there are known constraints, their motive for acting must be stronger.
Elms and Milgram (1966)
MMPI scale and F-scale test. Follow up study.
Identification
A moderate type of conformity where we act in the same way with the group because we value it and want to be apart of it. But we don’t necessarily agree with everything the majority believes.
Synchronic Consistency
Consistency between group members.
Asch (1951)
Testing conformity. Line lengths.