A form of social influence in which an individual follows a
direct order. The person issuing the order is usually a figure
of authority, who has the power to punish when obedient
behaviour fails.
Milgram
40 male participants were asked to take part in a 'memory test'. Participants were
'randomly' allocated as the role of the teacher, whilst a confederate was given the
position of learner. The learner was strapped to a chair in another room, whilst
the teacher was given the controls for a shock machine. The teacher had to give
the learner a severe electric shock every time they got a question wrong,.
increasing the voltage each time up to a deadly 450V. The teachers were not told
that the shocks were actually fake and that the learner was an actor. The teacher
was prompted by a fake scientist in a lab coat to continue on with the study and
obey their orders, stating that the experiment requires them to continue. At 300V
the learner expressed distress and pain and stopped responding for the rest of
the study.
Results: No participant asked to stop the study below 300V. Five
(12.5%) stopped at 300V. 65% continued to 450V. Observations
indicated that participants showed signs of extreme tension and
stress. Three had uncontrollable seizures. It was predicted that no
more than 3% would continue to 450V. Participants were debriefed
and consoled. The study showed the extent to which people will
obey orders of authority, to the point where they could inflict
serious harm onto another person.
Orne and Holland suggested
participants guessed the electric shocks
were fake, so milgram was not testing
what he intended, lacking internal
validity.
Milgram argued that the lab-based relationship
between experimenter and participant reflected wider
real-life authority relationships, showing high external
validity. This is supported by Hofling- who found that by
pretending to be a doctor he could persuade real nurses
in a hospital to carry out unjustified demands over the
phone, such as injecting a patient with an abnormal
dose. 21 out of 22 nurses obeyed.
There are ethical issues with Milgram's research.
participants believed they were randomly allocated roles
and were deceived into believing the shocks were real.
Additionally, many showed high levels of distress and
anxiety, meaning they experienced psychological harm.
In a french documentary
contestants were paid to
give (fake) electric
shocks- when ordered by
the presenter- to
participants (actors). 80%
gave the max 450V to an
unconscious man. This
supports Milgram's
original conclusions
about obedience to
authority and that it is
reliable.
Explanations
Situational variables
Proximity- In Milgram's original
study, the teacher and learner
were in the adjoining rooms
(hear but not see) . In the
proximity variation, teacher
and learner were in the same
room. Obedience dropped to
40%. In the remote-instruction
variation, the experimenter
gave instructions via phone
rather than in the room.
Obedience dropped to 20.5%
Location- Milgram's
original study was done in
Yale University
(prestigious location). In
the location variation, it
was carried out in a
run-down building.
Obedience fell to 47.5%,
suggesting there was less
authority in this setting.
Uniform- In the original study, the experimenter wore a grey lab coat as a
symbol of authority. In the uniform variation, the experimenter was called
away for a phone call and was replaced by an 'ordinary member of the
public'. Obedience rates dropped to 20%, suggesting uniform has a strong
effect on obedience.
Bickman had a confederate dress
either causally or as a security guard
and asked passers-by in a park to pick
up litter. People were twice as likely to
obey the 'security guard' than the
normal looking person. This supports
milgram's findings on uniform on
obedience.
Orne and Holland suggested participants in Milgram's variations were even more
likely to realise the procedure was faked because of the experimental
manipulation. Where the experimenter was replaced with a member of the
public, even Milgram recognised it was likely they would have worked it out. This
reduces internal validity.
Milgram systematically altered one variable
at a time to test obedience. Other variables
were kept constant as the study was
replicated on over 1000 participants. This
increases the reliability of the results.
Social-psychological
factors
Agentic state
In an agentic state a person feels
no personal responsibility for their
actions, they are acting on behalf
of another person. The opposite,
would be an autonomous state;
where were feel independent and
free with our actions.
The shift from autonomy to being an 'agent'
is called the agentic shift. Milgram
suggested that this occurs when we
perceive someone else as an authority
figure. This person has power because of
their social position.
Binding factors are aspects of a situation that
allow the person to ignore or minimise the
damaging effect of their behaviour and reduce
the moral strain they feel. e.g shifting the
responsibility to the victim or denying the
damage they are doing to victims.
Schmidt- showed students a film of Milgram's study
and asked them who was responsible for the harm
on the learner. Students blamed the 'experimenter'
rather than the participant, due to their legitimate
authority.
Cannot explain all findings. Some of the participants didn't obey- all humans are in a
social hierarchy so should all obey. Also in Hofling's study, the nurses should have shown
anxiety whilst giving responsibility to the doctor because they understood their role in a
destructive process, but this was not the case.
Legitimacy of the authority
Most societies are structured hierarchically. People in
certain positions hold authority over the rest of us.
e.g parents, teachers, police officers, bouncers. The
authority they have is legitimate in the sense that it
is agrees by society. We mostly accept that authority
figures should exercise power over others for society
to run smoothly.
We give up some of our independence to people we
trust to exercise their authority properly. We learned to
accept authority during childhood from parents and
teachers. History has too often shown that leaders use
legitimate authority destructively, having people
behave in cruel and dangerous ways.
It is a useful account of cultural differences. Kilham and
Mann found a 16& obedience to authority rate in
Australians vs 85% in Germans. Authority is more likely to
be accepted as legitimate in some cultures. This reflect
how different societies are structured. Cross-cultural
research increases the validity of the explanation.
Can explain real-life obedience. The army has has
authority recognised by the government and in the
law. Soldiers assume orders given by the hierarchy
to be legal; even if it is to kill, rape and destroy
villages. The explanation gives reasons why
destructive obedience is committed.
Dispositional
explanations
Authoritarian personality
Adorno wanted to understand the anti-semitism of the holocaust.
It was believed that unquestioning obedience is a psychological disorder imbedded
in their personality. Adorno concluded that people with an authoritarian
personality have exaggerated respect for authority and submissiveness to it,
express contempt for people of an inferior social status, have conventional
attitudes towards race and gender.
it forms in childhood through harsh parenting; strict discipline, expectation of loyalty, impossibly
high standards and criticism. Often the parent's love depends entirely on how their child
behaves. These experiences create resentment and hostility in the child, this is displaced onto
others who are seen as weaker. This explains their hatred of people seen as socially inferior.
Adorno- Studied unconscious attitudes towards other racial groups in over 2000 middle-class americans. A scale was
developed for fascism (f-scale). Used statements such as 'Obedience and respect for authority are the most important
things for a child to learn' and 'There is hardly anything lower than a person who does not feel great gratitude and
respect for their parents'. Authoritarians, who scored highly, identified with 'strong' people and were scornful of the
'weak'. They were conscious of their own and other people's status. They had fixed and distinctive stereotypes about
groups.
Flawed methodology. The f-scale statements are worded in the
same 'direction' so the scale just measures the tendency to
agree with everything. Researchers knew participant's results
when interviewing them so they already knew who had an
authoritarian personality, making biased results likely. Therefore
lacks validity.
Correlation rather than cause and effect. Adorno could not
claim that harsh parenting caused development of an
authoritarian personality.
Explanation is limited. Millions of individuals in Germany displayed
obedient and anti-semitic behaviour-but didn't have the same
personality. It is unlikely the majority of Germany possessed an
authoritarian personality. Social identity theory is more likely- they
identified with the nazi state and adopted its views.
May be politically biased. Jahoda claimed the f-scale reflects extreme
right-wing idealogy. However, both right-wing and left-wing
authoritarianism both insist on complete obedience to political authority.
Adorno's theory may therefore not be a comprehensive dispositional
explanation.
Conformity
Types
Internalisation
When a person genuinely accepts
group norms. It results in a
private as well as public change of
opinions/behaviour. The change is
more likely to be permanent and
persist in the absence of group
members.
Identification
When we identify with a group
that we value, we want to
become part of it. So we
publicly change our
opinions/behaviours, even if
we don't privately agree with
everything the group/role
stands for.
Compliance
Involves 'going along with others' in
public, but not privately changing
opinions/behaviour. This results in
only a superficial change and the
opinion/behaviour stops as soon as
the group pressure does.
Explanations
Informational social
influence (ISI)
We agree with the opinion of
the majority because we
believe it is correct, and we
accept it because we want to
be correct as well. It is a
cognitive process- people want
to be right. It is most likely in
situations with scarce
information or ambiguity. It
can therefore explain
internalisation.
Lucas et al- asked students to give answers to
easy and difficult maths problems. There was
more conformity to incorrect answers when the
problems were difficult. This was most true for
students who rated their maths ability as poor.
This shows that people conform when they feel
they don't know the answer (supporting ISI).
There may be individual
differences. Asch found that
students were less conformist
(28%) than other participants
(37%). People who are
knowledgeable or more
confident may be less
influenced by the apparently
'right' majority.
Normative social
influence (NSI)
We agree with the opinion of the
majority because we want to be
accepted, gain social approval and be
liked. Norms regulate the behaviour of
groups so it is not surprising that we
pay attention to them. NSI is most
likely in situations where you don't
know the norms and so look to others
on how to behave. It is an emotional
process- people want to be liked. It can
therefore explain compliance.
There may be individual differences.
McGhee and Teevan found that
students who had a personality that
has a greater need for social
relationships, were more likely to
conform. The desire to be liked effects
some more than others.
Asch- asked participants
why they agreed with the
wrong answer. Some said
they felt self-conscious
giving the right answer and
were afraid of disapproval.
When they were asked to
write down their answers,
conformity rates fell to 12%
Deutsch and Gerrard's two-process approach is that
conformity is either due to NSI or ISI. However, Asch found
that conformity reduced when there was a dissenting
partner, who may have reduced NSI (by providing social
support) or ISI (alternative source of information). Therefore
it isn't always possible to know whether ISI or NSI is at work.
Asch: 123 male students were
tested individually with a group
of 6-8 confederates. On each trial
participants had to say which line
(A, B or C) was the same length as
the standard line. On 12/18 trials
the confederates gave a
purposeful (and quite obvious)
wrong answer.
Participants conformed and gave a
wrong answer 36.8% of the time.
Only 25% never conformed on any of
the trials, meaning 75% conformed
at least once. This shows a high level
of conformity, called the Asch effect-
the extent to which people conform
even in an unambiguous situation.
Perrin and Spencer- more recently found just one conforming response in 396 trials in a
remake of Asch's method. Participants were more confident to measure the lines and act less
conformist. This may be because in the 1950s when Asch's was carried out, it was a period of
high conformity & regard of social norms in America, meaning his results may only reflect
society at that time, not as a feature of constant human behaviour.
The situation was artificial. Participants knew they were in a study so may have just
responded to demand characteristics. The line task was trivial so there was no reason
not to conform. The 'groups' were also not like those in everyday life. The results are
therefore difficult to generalise to everyday situations.
Only men were tested by Asch. Neto suggested that women might be more
conformist because they are more concerned about social relationships.
Additionally, participants were from the USA, an individualist culture (where
people are more concerned with themselves.)
Asch's variations: Group size:
The number of confederates
varied between 1 and 15. He
found that with two
confederates, conformity to a
wrong answer was 13.6% and
with three it rose to 31.8%.
Adding more than three made
little difference.
Unanimity: Asch introduced a truthful
confederate or one who was dissenting but
inaccurate. Whether the dissenter was giving
right or wrong answers, the conformity levels
dropped by a quarter. They allowed the
participant to behave more independently and
have more social support.
Task difficulty: Asch made the
line-judging task harder by making the
comparison lines more similar.
Conformity increased when the task was
more difficult, suggesting that ISI plays a
greater role when a task becomes harder
and more ambiguous.
Zimbardo: set up a mock prison in stanford university to see whether prison aggression
was due to situation or individuals. 24 'emotionally stable' students were randomly
assigned roles of guards or prisoners. To increase realism, prisoners were arrested,
blindfolded, strip-searched, deloused and issued a uniform and a number. Prisoner's daily
routines were heavily regulated. Guards had their own uniform, a wooden club, handcuffs
and keys. They were told that they had complete power over the prisoners.
Within two days, the prisoners rebelled against their treatment. Guards harassed
prisoners and used every opportunity to reinstate and abuse their power. After the
rebellion was put down, prisoners became anxious and depressed. One prisoner
went on a hunger strike and two were released early due to psychological
disturbance. The study was stopped after 6 days. This revealed how a situation and
social role can influence people's behaviour to conform to norms. The more guards
identified with their roles, the more brutal they became.
Had control over some variables. The guards and prisoners were allocated at
random, showing their behaviour was due to pressures of their situation not their
personalities. Control increases the study's internal validity.
Potential lack of realism, Mohavedi suggested that the participants were
play-acting, their performances reflected stereotypes of how prisoners and
guards should behave, and based their roles on film characters. However,
zimbardo's data showed 90% of conversations were about prison life; the
simulation seemed real to them, increasing the study's internal validity.
Lacks research support. Reicher and Haslam partially replicated the study with different findings. Prisoners eventually took control. Guards
failed to develop a shared social identity as a group, but the prisoners did and refused to accept limits of their roles. Suggests Zimbardo's
study may be due to a shared social identity as a cohesive group, rather than conformity to social roles.
Resistance to social
influence
Refers to the ability of people to
withstand the social pressure to
conform to the majority or obey
authority. This ability to withstand
social pressure is influenced by
situational and dispositional
factors
Social support
Pressure to conform is reduced if other
people are not conforming. Asch's research
showed that the dissenter doesn't have to
give the right answer. Simply someone else
not following the majority frees others to
follow their own conscience. The dissenter
acts as a 'model'.
Asch's research
also showed that if
this peer starts
conforming again,
so does the naive
participant.
Levine found independence
increased with one dissenter in an
asch-type study. This occurred
even if the dissenter wore think
glasses and said they had
problems with vision. So resistance
is not motivated by following what
someone says but it enables you
to be free of pressure from the
group.
Pressure to obey can be reduced if another person is
seen to disobey. Milgram's research showed that
independent behaviour increased significantly in one
condition when there was a disobedient peer. The
dissenter's disobedience frees the participant to act
from their own conscience.
Gamson et al found
higher levels of
rebellion than milgram
did. Participants were
in groups (they had to
produce evidence that
would be use to help
an oil company run a
swear campaign). 29
our of 33 groups
rebelled. This shows
peer support is linked
to greater resistance.
Locus of control
Rotter described interval vs. external LOC.
Internals believe things that happen to
them are largely controlled by themselves.
Externals believe things happen outside
their control. e.g luck.
People differ in how they explain
successes and failures but it isn't
as simple as being internal or
external. There is a continuum;
high internal at one end and high
external at the other, low internal
and low external lie inbetween.
People with internal LOC are more
likely to resist pressures to
conform or obey. If someone takes
personal responsibility for their
actions and experiences, they are
more likely to base their decisions
on own beliefs. People with high
internal LOC are more
self-confident, more
achievement-orientated and have
less need for social approval.
These traits lead to greater
resistance.
Holland repeated the Milgram study and measured whether
participants were internals or externals. 37% of internals did not
continue to the highest shock level whilst 23% of externals did
not continue. So internals showed greater resistance. This
support increases the validity of the LOC explanation.
Twenge et al- analysed data from LOC studies from the US over 40 years.
They showed that people have become more independent but also more
external. If resistance was linked to internal LOC we would expect people to
become more internal. This challenges the link between internal LOC and
resistance.
LOC is only important in new situations. It has little influence in familiar
situations where previous experiences are always more important .
Minority Influence
Refers to how one person or small
group influences the beliefs and
behaviours of other people. The
minority may influence just one
person, or a group of people (the
majority)
A minority changes the opinions of others
through internalisation. Consistency makes
others rethink their own views; the minority
always saying the same thing for a long time.
Activities must create some risk to the
minority to demonstrate commitment
to the cause. " Wow, they must really
believe what they're saying".
Nemeth argued that being stubborn and
repeating the same arguments and
behaviours is seen as rigid and off-putting to
the majority. The minority should adapt their
point of view and approach to appear flexible.
Over time, more people become converted. the more
this happens, the faster the rate of conversion.
Gradually the minority view becomes the majority and
social change has occurred.
Moscovici- A group of 6 people were showed
a set of 36 blue-green slides, varying in
intensity, and had to state whether it was
blue or green. In one condition the two
confederates consistently said the slides
were green. In another, confederates were
inconsistent about the colour. And the last
was a control group.
Consistent minority- participants gave the
same wrong answer on 8.4% of trials, 32%
gave the same answer at least once.
Inconsistent minority- agreement fell to
1.25%. Control group- participants gave a
wrong answer only 0.25% of the time.
Wood et al- conducted a
meta-analysis of almosy 100
similar studies and found
minorities seen as consistent
were most influencial, supporting
the idea that consistency is a
major factor in minority
influence.
Moscovici's task was indentifying
the colour of a slide, far removed
from how minorities work in real
life. In jury decision making and
politics, outcomes are vastly more
important- maybe life or death.
The artificial task lacks external
validity, not reflecting real life
situations.
Moscovici varied the study; he had
participants write their answers down
so it was private. Here agreement with
the minority was greater. This shows
that internalisation took place.
Members of the majority had been
reluctant to convert 'publicly'.
Applications are limited. Studies make a
clear distinction between majority and
minority, however in real-life it's a lot more
complicated. The difference is about more
than just numbers. Majorities usually have
power and status whilst minorities are
tight-knit groups. Minority influence
research rarely reflects these dynamics
making it difficult to apply.
Social change
Social influence- the
process by which
individuals and
groups change each
other's attitudes
and behaviours.
Including
conformity,
obedience and
minority influence.
Social change- When
whole societies,
rather than just
individuals, adopt
new attitudes, beliefs
and behaviours. Eg.
gay rights,
environmental issues,
equal right to vote.
Lessons from
Minority influence
1) Segregation
in 1950's
America- Civil
rights marches
drew attention
to the racism by
providing social
proof of the
problem
2) People took
part in
marches on a
large scale. The
minority
displayed
consistency of
message and
intent.
3) This meant
that many
people who had
accepted the
status quo
began thinking
about the
unjustness of it.
4) Augmentation-
People began to
fight rules such as
black and white
seating on a bus.
Many were
mobbed and
beaten.
5) Snowball effect-
Civil rights activists
gradually got the
attention of the US
government. The
Civil rights act was
passed,
prohibiting
discrimination.
6) Social cryptoamnesia- Refers to people having a memory
that a change happened but not remembering how
Lessons from
Conformity
Asch's research showed
the importance of dissent
in one variation where a
confederate always gave
correct answers. This
broke the power of the
majority encouraging
others to dissent. This
demonstrates a potential
for social change.
Environmental and health
campaigns exploit
conformity by appealing to
NSI. They provide info
about what others are
doing, e.g messages on bins
'bin it- others do'. Social
change is encouraged by
drawing attention to the
majority's behaviour.
Nolan hung messages on front doors of houses. The
message was most residents are trying to reduce energy
usage. There were significant reduces in energy use
compared to a control group who saw the messages but
with no reference to other people's behaviour.
Lessons from
Obedience
Milgram's research showed the importance of
disobedient models in a variation where a
confederate refused to give shocks. The rate of
obedience in the genuine participants plummeted.
Zimbardo suggested that once a small instruction is
obeyed, it becomes more difficult to resist a bigger one.
People 'drift' into a new kind of behaviour.
Nemeth suggested the effects of minority influence are indirect and delayed. It
has taken decades for some attitude changes to take place. Often the majority is
influenced only on matters related to the central issue, not the issue itself.
Minority influence is fragile and narrow in explaining social change.
Identification may be an important role over looked in minority influence. Bashir suggested
that people are less likely to behave in environmentally friendly ways in fear of being labelled
negatively 'tree hugger'. Minorities should avoid behaving in ways that reinforce stereotypes
which may be off-putting to majority.
Explanations of social change
rely on studies like
Moscovici, Asch and Milgram.
These can be evaluated over
the artificial nature of the
tasks and whether the group
dynamics reflect real-life.
These criticisms can be
applied to the research
support for the link between
social influence and social
change.