YR13 Social Influence: Minority Influence & Social Change - MR Flashcards
Here is the first mark point for a definition of minority influence ‘minority influence is a form of social influence where members of the majority group change their beliefs or behaviours because of the minority influencing their decision, this usually leads to internalisation’.
What is the second mark point to complete the definition?
The minority must be consistent, show commitment and be flexible in their views/beliefs.
Which minority influence key term is being described? “Members of the minority should not be too dogmatic and rigid, they should adapt their point of view and accept reasonable counterarguments”
Flexibility
What key term is being described here: The minority keep repeating the same beliefs to the majority both over time and between all individuals that form the minority group.
Consistency
Describe Moscovici’s sample.
172 female ppts
In Moscovici’s research, what % of the majority changed their mind when the minority inconsistently called the blue slides ‘green’?
1%
In Moscovici’s study what % of the majority changed their mind to be in line with the minority when the minority were consistent and committed?
8%
What must the minority do to show commitment?
Show dedication and make personal sacrifices.
What methodology did Moscovici use to investigate minority influence?
Lab experiment
Which aspects of minority influence did Moscovici study?
Consistency and commitment.
A03 Give one weakness of Moscovici’s research into consistency and commitment.
It lacks mundane realism.
A03 Why does Moscovici’s research lack mundane realism?
Unrealistic task of stating the colour of a slide.
Nemeth and Brillmayer (1987) created a mock jury situation and found that when a confederate put forward an alternative point of view and refused to compromise did not influence the majority. However, the a confederate who compromised did have an influence on the rest of the group.
Does this support or contradict minority influence?
Which aspect does this research support or contradict?
Support
Flexibility
A03 What is the real life evidence/example that supports minority influence?
The suffragette movement.
How did the suffragettes show commitment?
They showed dedication by going on hunger strike.
A03 How did the suffragettes show commitment?
They showed dedication by going on hunger strike.
The suffragettes accepted that women should have a voting age of 30 when men were able to vote from 21. What aspect of minority influence is this an example of?
Flexibility.
A03 Why is the lack of mundane realism in Moscovici’s study a weakness?
It is difficult to generalise the findings to real situations of minority influence where outcomes are more important.
What does minority influence usually lead to?
Internalisation.