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Published byGyles Cummings Modified over 9 years ago
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The Impact of Other People on Our Everyday Lives A Look at Authority, Group Conformity, and Groupthink
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Milgram’s Obedience Studies “The Man Who Shocked the World”
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The “Gentle Accountant” being strapped to the chair…
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The Shock Generator
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Shock Levels
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The Experiment Set-up
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Variations on Experiment 1. Subject control 2. Amount of surveillance by authority (closeness/proximity). 3. Use of force…
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Variations on Experiment 4. Subject’s position in larger chain of command. 5. Level of peer support…
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Asch’s Conformity Studies “We are half ruined by conformity; but we should be wholly ruined without it.” ~Charles Dudley Warner
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Asch Experiment
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U1__sHLRF-M
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Asch Subjects
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Conditions Affecting Conformity 1. Unanimity of the majority 2. Attraction to the group 3. Commitment to future interaction with the group 4. Level of competence relative to other group members
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Janis on Groupthink How Good Groups Make Bad Decisions
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Conditions that Contribute to Groupthink 1. Crisis situation 2. Highly cohesive group--high level of we-ness 3. Insulation of group members from judgments and criticisms of qualified others 4. Leader who actively promotes own solution to problems facing the group
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How to Avoid Groupthink 1. Group leader should encourage dissent 2. Group leader should be impartial 3. Establish several independent subgroups 4. Call a second chance meeting where each member is encouraged to think about doubts
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The Impact of Social Structure on Our Everyday Lives
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Aspects of Social Structure Social institution: the sum of roles and statuses, values, and norms; relatively stable cluster of statuses and roles that develop over time to often insure that some basic need in society will be taken care of. Status: a position that an individual occupies within the larger social structure Role: the expectations for behavior attached to a given status
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Zimbardo’s Prison Study “It’s the situation that controls you.”
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