Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Giving in to social pressure

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Giving in to social pressure"— Presentation transcript:

1 Giving in to social pressure
conformity Giving in to social pressure

2 definitions Conformity - acting or believing because of social pressure compliance - doing what someone asks you to do

3 conformity Everyone else is doing it Deliberate social pressure
not necessarily because you think it is right

4 Sherif’s study point of light in dark room appears to move
Autokinetic effect impossible to judge distance someone says 2 inches subject agrees

5 Asch Judgments of lines easy to make

6 10 of 15

7 First few trials everyone gives right answer
then everyone gives wrong answer what does the subject do? many give the wrong answer

8 13 of 15

9 15 of 15

10 Why do people conform? Two main reasons Information Normative

11 Informational Sherif situation ambiguous, no experience
others provide information rational response

12 Normative pressure Asch situation – clear, unambiguous
just because other do not want to be deviant

13 Obedience and compliance
compliance - doing what someone asks you to do Obedience – similar but less choice

14 Milgram Study Not conformity - no group pressure Obedience but why?

15 Does it mean people are terrible. That they will do anything
Does it mean people are terrible? That they will do anything? That it explains Nazi behavior? Or Bosnia, Cambodia etc.?

16 NO! Given the right situation people will comply or be obedient
not necessarily bad or weak people

17 Situational pressure Authority figure strange situation
told there was no choice trust experimenter also - psychology experiment very powerful contract

18 The power of the experiment
Orne - hypnosis study hypnotized pretend to be hypnotized neither

19 Ask each person to: Reach into cage with snake
pick dime out of nitric acid throw acid in person’s face

20 results

21 results Controls did quite a lot hypnotized did more than controls
pretend did even more than hypnotized

22 Compliance - other factors

23 the Hawthorne effect Move to special room
pay depended on groups of sex two 5 minute rest periods two 10 minute rest periods six 5 minute rest periods light lunch provided

24 Work stopped half-hour early
work stopped an hour early work stopped an hour and half early five day workweek (from six) all original conditions reinstated

25 Work increased with every change
results Work increased with every change

26 Why? Special treatment felt good assumed changes were for the better
were happy and wanted to please were compliant

27 Foot-in-the-door Small request first vs. no small request
large request later

28 No first contact agree only agree and 8 questions 3 days later - large request

29 results

30 huge sign for safe driving
Safe driving study Petition for environment petition for safe driving Small sign for environment small sign for safe driving huge sign for safe driving

31 results

32 door-in-the-face huge request first small request second

33 results

34 Obligation - favors Pleasant or unpleasant person person brings a coke
experimenter brings a coke no coke person asks a favor - selling raffle tickets

35 results

36 reactance Jack Brehm too much pressure or too obvious
resist threats to freedom of action opposite effect


Download ppt "Giving in to social pressure"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google