What is conformity
· Also known as majority influence
· conformity is yielding to group pressure
What are the 3 types of conformity
What is compliance
when a person goes along with others behavioural attitudes but doesn’t believe them to be correct
- they comply publicly but their private opinion doesn’t change
- they do along with beliefs/ behaviour to keep peace and to gain approval
- it is only a temporary change when in the presence of the group
What is identification
when individuals adjust their their behaviour and opinions to those in a group as a membership of the group is desirable
- changes of beliefs are both public and private, however are often temporary
Internalisation
When an individual accepts the groups view and believes that view to be correct
- they are conforming with the genuine belief that the groups beliefs/behaviour is correct
- these changes in behaviour are often permanent
What are the explanations for conformity
Who carried out research on the explanations of conformity and what did they say about NSI and ISI
What is informal social influence
What is normative social influence
Explanations A03 - research support
Jenness(1932)
- used 101 psychology students
- conducted a study with a jaw of white beams
- Individual estimates moved towards the estimates of others
- shows you genuinely (privately believed these estimates
- demonstrates Internalisation
Changing answers is likely to be due to ISI
Lucas et al(2006)
- asked students to give answers to mathematical
problems that were easy or more difficult
- there was a greater conformity to incorrect answers
When the questions were more difficult
- this was true for students who believed their
mathematical ability to be poor
↳ shows more people conform when they are not
confident in their answer, therefore supports the
ISI explanation,
Increases validity and providing explanatory power
Explanations A03- nAffiliators
Strength
- research shows that NSI doesn’t affect everyone in the same way
- those who are more concerned about the opinions of others are more likely to be affected by NSI
- these people are referred to as “nAffiliators” as they need affiliation more.
Explanations A03 - ISI isn’t seen in everyone
Limitation
- ISI doesn’t affect everyone’s behaviour in the same way
- Asch found that students were less conformist that other ppts
- Perrin et al conducted a study involving scientists and engineers and conformity was low
Decreases generalisability so decreases validity
Explanations A03 - support from Asch
What were the aims of Asch
He wanted to examine the extent to which social pressure from a majority, could affect a person to conform.
What variations of the study did asch investigate
What relationship did Asch find between conformity and group size?
Conformity to the wrong answer increases with the group size, until there is a group size of 3 people where conformity levels plateau
What was the relationship found by Asch between conformity and task difficulty?
ISI plays a greater role as the task gets harder, conformity increases with the difficulty of a task
How did Asch make the task harder
Made the stimulus line and the comparison lines closer in length
What was the name of the confederate that disagreed with the rest of the group
Dissenter
What was the maximum group size that Asch tested
15 ppts
What was conformity for Asch’s study web there were 3 confederated
32%
How did asch use dissenters in his study
One dissenter was instructed to give the correct answer whilst the other confederates continues to giv wrong answers
- in this situation conformity to the group dropped to 5%
Asch evaluation - ecological validity
Asch evaluation - temporal validity