Social Influence-Type Of Conformity And Explanations For Comformity Flashcards
Compliance-
Individuals accepts influence because they hope to achieve a favourable reaction from those around them.
An attitude/behaviour is adopted for rewards or approval associated with its adoption
Public change 👯👯, not personal 🚶🏾🚫
Internalisation
Occurs when an individual accepts influence because the content of the attitude or behaviour proposed is consistent with their own value system
Identification- 👥
A form of influence where an individual adopts an attitude or behaviour because they want to be associated with a particular person or group
Informational Social Influence- ✅✅
A form of influence, which is a result of desire to be right ✅… Looking to others as a way of gaining evidence about reality 👀
Normative Social Influence- 🚶🏾🚶🏾🚶🏾
Form of influence whereby an individual conforms with the expectations of the majority in order to gain approval or to avoid social disapproval
Evaluation:
Difficulties in distinguishing between compliance and internalisation
With Compliance it would be typically assumed that a person publicly agrees but disagreed in private.
➡️It could be argued that the acceptance dissipates when in private due to the forgetting of information
With internalisation it would be typically assumed that a person would agree in public and private.
➡️it could be the case that the individual was initially only agreeing publicly. However after self-perception the come to subsequently accept that position as their own.
Research support for normative influence:
Likenbach and Perkins (2003)
➡️found adolescents exposed to a simple message that the majority of their age peers not smoking ▶️ Subsequently lee to them being less likely to take up smoking.
Schultz et al. (2008)
➡️hotel guests shown a message that “75% of guests reused their towels each day” led to a 25% reduction in their own towel usage
↪️these studies support the claim that people shape their behaviour out of a desire to fit in with reference group
Research support for informational influence:
Wittenbrink and Henley (1996)
➡️found that ppts. Exposed to negative information about African Americans (❌👦🏿 = led to believe was view of the majority hence later reporting more negative beliefs about a black individual)
Normative influence may not be detected:
Researchers speculate whether individuals actually recognise/appreciate he behaviour of others as a causal factor in their own behaviour
Nolan et al. (2008)
➡️investigated whether people secreted influence of social norms on energy conservation behaviour ⚡️⚡️
➡️when asked about factors influencing energy conservation… People believed that the behaviour of neighbours had the least impact, yet results showed it had the strongest
➡️Suggests people rely on beliefs about what “should” motivate their behaviour hence under-detect impact of normative influence