Variables affecting conformity as investigated by Asch Flashcards
What did Jennenss study do
Participants had to guess the number of jellybeans in the jar.
They gave their estimates individually.
They then discussed their estimates as a group. After discussion, group estimates were generated.
Finally, they gave a second individual estimate.
what did the jelly bean study find
It was found that the second private estimate tended to converge/move towards the group estimate.
What did Jenness conclude
Jenness concluded that the judgements of individuals are affected by majority opinions, especially in ambiguous or unfamiliar situations.
what type of conformity did the participants present in the jelly bean study
The conformity produced was motivated by informational social influence (ISI), where individuals in uncertain situations look to others for guidance as to how to behave.
What did Asch argue about the jelly bean study
Asch argued that the study tells us little, if anything, about majority influence (conformity) in non-ambiguous situations.
What did the Sheriff study do
The autokinetic effect is where a point of light shone on the wall of a completely dark room appears to move.
Participants were asked to estimate how far the dot of light moved (the effect works differently for everyone).
They then had to confer in groups about their estimates and make a second individual estimate.
what did the Sheriff study find
It was found that after the discussion the estimates converged - if one person’s original estimate was very different to the other two group member’s they would ultimately conform to the view of the other two.
What was the aim of Asch’s study
To investigate the degree to which individuals would conform to a majority who gave obviously wrong answers
what was the procedure of Asch’s study
Sample: 123 American male college students participated in what they were told was a study of visual perception.
6 confederates (stooges – accomplices, working on behalf of the investigator)
7 ‘participants’ sat in a room (6 confederates + 1 naïve participant)
The genuine participant was either last or second to last when giving their answer.
The participants had to call out, in turn, which of the three comparison lines, A, B or C, was the same length as the test line.
Critical trials: where confederates gave unanimous (the same/identical) wrong answers.
There were 12 critical trials (out of 18)
what were the findings of Asch’s study
There was a 32% conformity rate to wrong answers on the 12 critical trials (across all participants).
75% of participants conformed to at least one wrong answer (on the critical trials).
25% of participants did not conform at all.
5% of participants conformed to all 12 wrong answers (on the critical trials)
what were the conclusions of this study
Even in unambiguous situations, there may be strong group pressure to conform, especially if the group is a unanimous majority.
However, after interviewing his participants, Asch concluded that people go along with the views of others for different reasons:
Some people experience normative social influence and feel compelled to accept the mistaken majority’s norms or standards of behaviour to avoid being rejected.
Others experience informational social influence and doubt their own judgements - ‘surely they can’t all be wrong!’
What are the three reasons for conformity in Asch’s study
Distortion of action
Distortion of perception
Distortion of judgement
what is distortion of action
Where the majority of participants who conformed did so publicly, but not privately, to avoid ridicule.
What is distortion of perception
Where participants believed their perception (of the lines) was wrong and so conformed – they believed the actors’ answers were correct, and were apparently unaware that the majority were giving incorrect answers. “I am wrong, they are right.”
What is distortion of judgment
Where some participants had doubts concerning the accuracy of their judgements and lacked confidence, so conformed to the majority view.