The Influence of Others on Decisions and Actions Flashcards
what’s informational social influence?
when we conform because we think others have more information on what is true/accurate. It often leads to conversion.
what’s normative social influence?
when we conform to the expectations of others = behavioural compliance in group contexts.
what’s conversion?
internalisation of change in attitude/behaviour
what’s compliance?
external change in attitude/behaviour (e.g., public agreement).
sherif (1939): autokinetic experiment
- a small spot of light (projected onto a screen) in a dark room will appear to move even though it is still (i.e., it is a visual illusion).
- articipants were individually tested, their estimates of how far the light moved varied considerably
-then tested in groups of three. Sherif manipulated the composition of the group by putting together two people whose estimate of the light movement when alone was very similar and one person whose estimate was very different. Each person in the group had to say aloud how far they thought the light had moved. - over numerous estimates (trials) of the movement of light, the group converged to a common estimate
Asch (1952): Normative social influence - group influence on unambiguous judgments
Results:
- Average conformity was 33%
- 5% conformed on all trials
- 50% conformed on 6 or more trials
- 25% remained independent
- Compared to 0.7% errors in the control (Alone)
Some thought the group was right, while others knew they weren’t.
Independents were certain of what they saw
Review of Asch (1952)
Asch’s experiments have been largely misunderstood:
Results could be interpreted as (i) low levels of public conformity (only 1/3 of time), (ii) almost no private persuasion
Group pressure was only enough for a public show of consensus, but participants were not actually persuaded (private response condition = 12.5% conformity).
decreasing pressure and uncertainty reduced conformity
what social factors influence conformity?
- Group size: greater conformity with larger groups.
- Group unanimity:greater conformity when group is unanimous.
- Anonymity: conformity decreases when decisions can be made anonymously.
what social factors influence conformity?
- High status (normative influence) and/or high expertise (informational influence) group members have more social influence.
- Explanations for behaviour: conform less when we understand the reasons for other people’s behaviors.
- Cultural norms :conformity is greater in interdependent cultures that focus on preservation of social harmony/social glue. Regardless most cultures still find it difficult to resist conforming to the group norm.
what is relative informational influence? (influence of social identity)
- where social identity shapes individual behaviour to be consistent with salient group identity (Turner, 1991).
- Even in low ambiguity situations with no social sanctions people comply with group responses
- The more identification with group, the more influenced
Milgram (1963): study on obedience
- ways in which authority can influence people
- near lethal fake electric shocks administered to confederate by P, confederate in a separate room
15 to 450 volts on the machine:
75V: Ugh!
150V: Get me out of here! My heart’s starting to bother me! I refuse to go on! Let me out!
180V: I can’t stand the pain!
220V: Let me out! Let me out!
270V: Agonised screams
300V: Refuse to answer and agonised screams
315V: Intensely agonised screams
345V: Silence
Throughout: if the participant was hesitating,the experimenter told him/her to go on. - people predicted that a lower percentage would go through to the full 450V than those ps who actually did
effects of free choice on Milgram’s study, could experiement be explained by aggression?
- Exp 11: participants chose own shock level
- Absence of authority instructions
- Should rapidly gravitate towards the maximum 450v if aggression based
- But only 3 participants went beyond 135v, only 1 went to 450v
- When free choice, administered levels of shocks are considerably lower
what factors effect obedience?
- closeness of learner
a. unseen and unheard: 100% compliance
b. pounding on the wall: 62.5%
c. visible during experiment: 40% - proximity of shock
equipment
a. Holding hand to electrode: 30% - legitimacy of authority
a. not run at Yale uni, run down basement in city: 48%
Meta-Milgram (2014) Haslam, Loughnan & Perry
- re-analysed Milgram’s data from 21 conditions of his obedience study.
- obedience rate across 21 conditions was 43.6% (323/740 participants)
what factors predicted the likelihood that teachers would continue to 450V?
- legitimacy of experimenter
- non-directiveness of experimenter
- inconsistency of experimenter
- distance between teacher and experimenter
- group pressure on teacher to disobey
- proximity of teacher and learner
- in-directiveness of teacher and learner
- intimacy of teacher and learner