Psychology Social Influence – Flashcards
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Define Conformity
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A change in a person's behaviour or opinions as a result of real or imagined pressure from a person or group of people' (Elliot Aronson 2011).
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Define Internalisation
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A deep type of conformity where we take on the majority view because we accept it as correct. It leads to a far-reaching and permanent change in behaviour. even when the group is absent.
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Define Identification
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A moderate type of conformity where we act in the same way with the group because we value it and want to be part of it. But we don't necessarily agree with everything the majority believes.
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Define Compliance
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A superficial and temporary type of conformity where we outwardly go along with the majority view, but privately disagree with it. The change in our behaviour only lasts as long as the group is monitoring us.
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Define Informational social influence (ISI)
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An explanation of conformity that says we agree with the opinion of the majority because we believe it is correct. We accept it because we want to be correct as well. This may lead to internalisation.
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What did Milgram want to find out
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Why the German population had followed the orders of Hitler and slaughtered over 10 million Jews, gypsies and members of other social groups in the Holocaust during the second world war
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What did Kelman (1958) suggest
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that there are three ways in which people conform to the opinion of a majority
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What are three ways in which people conform to the opinion of a majority, according to Kelman
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Internalisation Identification Compliance
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What are the type of conformity
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Internalisation Identification Compliance
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Explain internalisation
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Occurs when a person genuinely accepts the group norms. This results in a private as well as a public change of opinions/behaviour. This change is likely to be permanent because attitudes have been internalised, i.e. become pan of the way the person thinks. The change in opinions/behaviour persists even in the absence of other group members.
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When does internalisation occur
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when a person genuinely accepts the group norms.
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What is the result of internalisation
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in a private as well as a public change of opinions/behaviour.
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Why is the change likely to be permanent in internalisation
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because attitudes have been internalised, i.e. become part of the way the person thinks.
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In internalisation, the change in opinions/behaviour......
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persists even in the absence of other group members.
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What is identification
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When we conform to the opinions/behaviour of a group because there is something about that group we value.
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What happens to the public and private opinions/behaviour
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we publicly change our opinions/behaviour to achieve this goal, even if we don't privately agree with everything the group stands for.
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Explain Identification
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Sometimes we conform to the opinions/behaviour of a group because there is something about that group we value. We identify with the group, so we want to be part of it. This may mean we publicly change our opinions/behaviour to achieve this goal, even if we don't privately agree with everything the group stands for.
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What does compliance involve
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'going along with others' in public, but privately not changing personal opinions/behaviour.
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Compliance results in
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only a superficial change.
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When does a particular behaviour or opinion stop in compliance
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as soon as group pressure stops.
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Explain complaince
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This type of conformity involves simply 'going along with others' in public, but privately not changing personal opinions/behaviour. Compliance results in only a superficial change. It also means that a particular behaviour or opinion stops as soon as group pressure stops.
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What are the two explanations for conformity
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Informational social influence Normative social influence
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What did Deutsch and Gerard (1955) do
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They developed a two-process theory, arguing that there are two main reasons people conform.
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Who developed a two-process theory, arguing that there are two main reasons people conform.
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Deutsch and Gerard
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What did Deutsch and Gerard base their model on
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on two central human needs: the need to be right (ISI), the need to be liked (NSI).
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What is 'Informational social influence' about
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who has the better information - you or the rest of the group.
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Why does 'Informational social influence' occur
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Because we are uncertain about what behaviours or beliefs are right or wrong.
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Give an example when 'Informational social influence' may occur
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Not knowing the answer to a question in class. But if most of the class agrees on one answer, you accept that answer because you feel they are likely to be right.
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In 'Informational social influence', why do individuals follow the behaviour of the group (the majority)
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is because people want to be right.
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'Informational social influence' is a.......
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cognitive process
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Why is Informational social influence' a cognitive process
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because it is to do with what you think.
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'Informational social influence' is most likely to happen in situations that are
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new to a person (so you don't know what is right) situations where there is some ambiguity, so it isn't clear what is right. crisis situations where decisions have to be made quickly. when one person (or group) is regarded as being more of an expert.
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Define Normative social influence (NSI)
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An explanation of conformity that says we agree with the opinion of the majority because we want to be accepted, gain social approval and be liked. This may lead to compliance.
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What did Milgram want to know
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If Germans were different (if they were more obedient).
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How did Milgram start his research
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By establishing a method to study obedience
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Define Obedience
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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 is not forthcoming
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What was the procedure of Milgrams study
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Milgram recruited 40 male participants through newspaper adverts and flyers in the post. The ad said that he was looking for participants for a study about memory. The participants requited were aged between 20-50 years. Their jobs ranged from unskilled to professional. They were offered $4.50 to take part. When participants arrived at Milgram's lab they were paid the money at the outset and there was a rigged draw for their role. A confederate always ended up as the learner while the true participant was the teacher. There was also an experimenter (another confederate) dressed in a lab coat, played by an actor. Participants were told they could leave the study at any time. The learner was strapped in a chair in another room and wired with electrodes. The teacher was required to give the learner an increasingly severe electric shock each time the learner made a mistake on a learning task. The task involved learning word pairs. The shocks were demonstrated to the teacher. Thereafter the shocks were not real. The shock level started at 15 (labelled slight shock on the shock machine) and rose through 30 levels to 450 volts (labelled 'danger'-severe shock). When the teacher got to 300 volts (intense shock), the learner pounded on the wall and then gave no response to the next question. After the 315 volt shock, the learner pounded on the wall again but after that there was no further response from the learner. When the teacher turned to the experimenter for guidance, the experimenter gave a standard instruction. 'An absence of response should be treated as a wrong answer'. If the teacher felt unsure about continuing, the experimenter used a sequence of four standard 'prods' which were repeated if necessary Prod 1- 'Please continue' or 'Please go on' Prod 2- 'The experiment requires that you continue' Prod 3- 'It is absolutely essential that you continue' Prod 4- 'You have no other choice, you must go on'
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What were the 4 prods used in Milgram's experiment
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Prod 1- 'Please continue' or 'Please go on' Prod 2- 'The experiment requires that you continue' Prod 3- 'It is absolutely essential that you continue' Prod 4- 'You have no other choice, you must go on'
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How many participants took part in Milgrams study
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40
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How did Milgram recruit participants
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Through newspaper adverts and flyers in the post
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What were the participants told the study would be about
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Memory
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The participants were recruited between the ages of
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20-50
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What were the jobs of the participants that took part
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unskilled to professional
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How much were the participants paid to take part in the study
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$4.50
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When the participants given the money
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At the outset
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What did the shock level start at
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at 15 (labelled slight shock on the shock machine)
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What did the shock machine consist of
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30 levels to 450 volts
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What happened when the teacher got to 300 volts
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The learner pounded on the wall and then gave no response to the next question
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What happened after the 315 volt shock
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The learner pounded on the wall again but after that there was no further response from the learner
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What happened when the teacher turned to the experimenter for guidance
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The experimenter gave a standard instruction. 'An absence of response should be treated as a wrong answer'
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What would happen if the teacher was unsure about continuing
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The experimenter used a sequence of 4 standard prods, which were repeated if necessarily Prod 1- 'Please continue' or 'Please go on' Prod 2- 'The experiment requires that you continue' Prod 3- 'It is absolutely essential that you continue' Prod 4- 'You have no other choice, you must go on'
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What happened in the Milgram study
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The learner was strapped in a chair in another room and wired with electrodes. The teacher was required to give the learner an increasingly severe electric shock each time the learner made a mistake on learning task of word pairs. The shocks were demonstrated to the teacher. Thereafter the shocks were not real.
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What were the findings of the Milgram study
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No participants stopped below 300 volts 12.5% stopped at 300 volts (5 participants)(intense shock) 65% continued to the highest level of 450 volts Participants showed signs of extreme tension. Eg. sweat, tremble, stutter, bite their lips, groan and dig their fingernails into their hands 3 participants had 'full-blown uncontrollable seizures' Milgram asked 14 psychology students to predict the participants behaviour. They estimated no more than 3% of the participants would continue to 450 volts. This shows that the findings were not expected. All participants were debriefed, and assured that their behaviour was entirely normal. Participants were sent a follow up questionnaire, 84% reported they felt glad to participated
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What type of qualitative data was collected by Milgram
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Observations that the participants showed signs of extreme tensions Eg. sweat, tremble, stutter, bite their lips, groan and dig their fingernails into their hands
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How many participants had seizures (Milgram)
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3
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How many participants continued to the highest level of 450 v (Milgram)
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65%
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How many participants stopped below 300 volts (Milgram)
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No participants
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How many participants stopped at 300v (Milgram)
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5 participants 12.5%
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What percentage of participants said they were glad to have taken part in the study (Milgram)
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84%
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What percentage of people did the psychology students think would go to 450 v (Milgram)
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3%
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Evaluation: Low internal validity (Milgram)
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Orne and Holland (1968) argued that participants behaved the way they did because they didn't really believe in the set up. They guessed it wasn't real electric shocks. In which case, Milgram was not testing what he intended to test (i.e. the study lacked internal validity) Gina Perry (2013) listened to tapes of Milgram's participants and reported that many of them expressed their doubts about the shocks. However Sheridan and King (1972) conducted a similar study where real shocks were given to a puppy. Despite the real shocks, 54% of the male student participants and 100% of the females delivered what they thought was a fatal shock. This suggests that the effects in Milgram's study were genuine because people behaved the same way with real shocks. Milgram reported that 70% of his participants said they believed the shocks were genuine.
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Evaluation: Good external validity (Milgram)
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Milgram's study at first may appear to lack external validity because it was conducted in a lab. However the central feature of this situation was the relationship between the authority figure (the experimenter) and the participant. Milgram argued that the lab environment accurately reflected wider authority relationships in real life. Hofling (1966) studied nurses on a hospital ward and found the levels of obedience to unjustified demands by doctors was very high. 21/22 nurses obeyed. This suggests that the process of obedience to authority that occurred in Milgram's lab study can be generalised to other situations. So his findings do have something valuable to tell us about how obedience operates in real life
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Evaluation: Supporting Replication (Milgram)
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Le Jeu de la Mort (The Game of Death) is a documentary about reality TV, presented on French television in 2010. It includes a replication of Milgram's study. The participants believed they were contestants in a pilot episode for a new game show called La Zone Extreme. They were paid to give (fake) electric shocks, when ordered by the presenter to other participants, who were actors, in front of a studio audience 80% of the participants delivered the maximum shock of 460 volts to an apparently unconscious man. Their behaviour was almost identical to that of Milgram's participants. Eg. Nervous laughter, nail biting and other signs of anxiety. This replication supports Milgrams original conclusions about obedience to authority and demonstrates that his findings were not just a one-off chance occurance
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Evaluation: An alternative explanation: Social identity theory (Milgram)
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The key to obedience lies in group identification. In Milgrams study, participants identified with the experimenter. They identified with the science of the study. When obeience levels fell, this was because the participants identified less with the science and more with the victim or with another group Haslam and Reicher analysed behaviour of the participants in Milgrams study. They looked at how a person behaved every time one of the 4 prods were used. The first 3 prods don't demand obedience, they appeal for help with the science. The 4th prod demands obedience. (You have no other choice, you must go on). Every time the 4th prod was used, the participant quit
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Evaluation: Ethical Issues (Milgram)
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Baumrind (1964) was very critical of the ways Milgram deceived his participants. Milgram led participants to believe that the allocation of roles as 'teacher' and 'learner' was random, but it was fixed. One of the most significant deception involved believing that the electric shocks were real. Baumrind objected because she saw deception as a betrayal of trust that could damage the reputation of psychologists and their research
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Define situational variables
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Milgram identified several factors that he believed influenced the level of obedience shown by participants. They are all related to the external circumstances rather than to the personalities of the people involved. They include proximity, location and uniform
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What are the 3 situational variables
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Proximity, location and uniform
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Define proximity
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The physical closeness or distance of an authority figure to the person they are giving the order to. It also refers to the physical closeness of the teacher to the victim (learner) in Milgram's study
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Define Location
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The place where an order is issued. The relevant factor that influences obedience is the status or prestige associated with the location
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Define uniform
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People in a position of authority often have a specific outfit that is symbolic of their authority, for example a police officers and judges. This indicates to the rest of us who is entitled to expect our obedience
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What did Milgram do after his first study on obedience
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He carried out a large number of variations in order to consider the situational variables that might create greater or lesser obedience
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Why did Milgram conduct other situational variables
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in order to consider the situational variables that might create greater or lesser obedience
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How was proximity investigated
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In Milgrams original study, the teacher and learner were in adjoining rooms, so the teacher could hear the learner but not see him. In the proximity variation, they were in the same room. In this condition, the obedience rate dropped from the baseline 65% to 40%
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What happened in the dramatic proximity variation
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The teacher had to force the learners hand onto an 'electroshock plate' when he refused to answer a question. In his touch proximity condition, the obedience rate dropped further to 30%. In a third proximity variation, the experimenter left the room and gave instructions to the teacher by telephone. In this remote instruction condition time proximity was reduced. The outcome was a further reduction in obedience to 20.5%. The participants also frequently pretended to give shocks or gave weaker ones than they were ordered ton
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In the touch proximity condition, obedience was
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30%
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What percentage of people were obedient in the remote instruction condition
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20.5%
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How was location investigated
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Milgram changed the location of the obedience study. He conducted a variation of the study in a run-down building rather than the prestigious university setting where it was originally conducted (Yale University). In this situation, the experimenter had less authority. Obedience level fell to 47.5%. This is still quite a high level of obedience but it is less than the original 65% in the original baseline study.
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The the location variation study, obedience level fell to..
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47.5%
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How was uniform investigated
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In the original baseline study, the experimenter wore a grey lab coat as a symbol of authority. Milgram carried out a variation in which the experimenter was called away because of an inconvenient call right at the start of the procedure. The role of the experimenter was taken over by an ordinary member of the public (played by a confederate) in everyday clothes rather than a lab coat. The obedience rate dropped to 20%
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In the uniform variation study, obedience level fell to
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20%
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Evaluation: Research support (Situational Variables)
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Other studies have demonstrated the influence of these situational variables on obedience. In a field experiment in New York, Bickman had 3 confederates dress in 3 different outfits (Jacket and tie, milkmans outfit and a security guards uniform. The confederates stood in the street and asked passers by to perform tasks such as picking up litter or giving the confederates a coin for the parking the one dressed in the jacket and tie. This suppports Milgram's conclusions that a uniform conveys the authority of its wearer and is a situational factor likely to produce obedience
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Evaluation: Lack of internal validity (Situational Variables)
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Orne and Holland's criticisms of Milgrams original study was that many of the participants worked out that the procedure was faked. It is even more likely that participants in Milgrams variations realised this because of the extra manipulation. A good example is the variation where the experimenter is replaced by a 'member of the public'. Even Milgram recognised that this situation was so contrived that some participants may well have worked out the truth. This is a limitation of all Milgram's studies because it is unclear whether the results are genuinely due to the operation of obedience or because the participants saw through the deception and acted accordingly
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Evaluation: Cross cultural replication (Situational Variables)
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A general strength of Milgram's research , that applies to his variation as well, it that his findings have been replicated in other cultures. The findings of cross-cultural research have been generally supportive of Milgram. For example, Miranda et al. found an obedience rate of over 90% amongst Spanish students. This suggests that Milgram's conclusions about the obedience and not limited to American males, but are valid across cultures and apply to females too. However, Smith and Bond (1998) make the crucial point that most replications have taken place in Western, developed societies ( such as Spain and Australia). These are culturally not that different from the USA, so it would premature to conclude that Milgram's findings about proximity, location and uniform apply to people everywhere.
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Define agentic state
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A mental states where we feel no personal responsibility for our behavior because we believe ourselves to be acting for an authority figure, i.e as their agent. This frees us from the demands of our conscience and allows us to obey even a destructive authority figure.
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Define legitimacy of authority
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And explanation for obedience which suggests that we are more likely to obey people who we perceive to have authority over us. This authority is justified (legitimate) by the individuals position of power within the social hierarchy
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Milgrams initial interest in obedience was sparked by
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The trial of Adolf Eichmann in 1961 for war crimes
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Who was Eichmann
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He had been in charge of the Nazi death camps and his defense was that he was only obeying orders
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Why did Milgram think that the obedience to destructive authority occurs
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Because a person does not take responsibility. instead they believe they are acting for someone else. That they are an agent
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What is an agent
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Someone who acts for or in the place of another
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What do agents experience
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They experience high anxiety (moral strains) when they realize that what they are doing is wrong but feel powerless to disobey
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What is the opposite of being in an agentic state
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Autonomous state
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What does being in an autonomous state mean
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They are free to behave according to their own principles and therefore feel a sense of responsibility for their own actions
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What is agentic shift
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The shift from autonomy to agency
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What is the shift from autonomy to agency called
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The agentic shift
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According to Milgram, when does agentic shift occur
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When a person perceives someone else as a figure of authority. This other person has greater power because of their position in the social hierarchy
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In most social groups when one person is in charge
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Others defer to this person and shift from autonomy to agency
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Why did the individuals in Milgram's study remain in an agentic state
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Due to binding factors
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What are binding factors
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Aspects of the situation that allow a person to ignore or minimise the damaging effect of their behaviour and therefore reduce the 'moral strain' they are feeling
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What stratergies did the participants in Milgrams use to reduce the 'moral strain' they were feeling
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Shifting the responsibility to the victim (he was foolish to continue) Or denying the the damage they were doing to the victims
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What is legitimacy of authority
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Most societies are structured in a Hierachy way. This means that people in certain positions hold authority over the rest of us at some times coparents teaches police officers who have some kind of authority over us at times