What did Doug Wheeler discover about facilitated communication?
What is another name for mass hysteria?
Epidemic Psychogenic Illness (EPI)
What is mass hysteria?
Large numbers of people suddenly become ill and recover hours later with no apparent medical reason.
What is the supposed cause of mass hysteria?
Stress builds up without any outlet, EPI provides a focus for anxiety and dissatisfaction
What is conformity?
A change in behaviour or belief to accord with others
What predicts conformity?
Why do people conform?
• normative influence
→ “Going along with the crowd” to avoid rejection, stay in people’s good graces, or gain their approval
→ Leads to public compliance
• informational influence
→ Conforming in order to be right in ambiguous situations
→ Leads to private acceptance
When do people conform?
What breeds obedience?
What is key to understanding Milgram’s experiment?
• Very few subjects blindly obeyed.
→ Most questioned the experimenter and protested.
What are some criticisms of Milgram’s experiment?
• When nothing seems to make sense, few people respond by acting decisively or by asserting independence.
→ Rather, they become indecisive, unwilling or unable to challenge authority, and highly dependent on those who calmly and confidently issue orders
What did Ross and Nisbett (1991) believe about Milgram’s research?
What was a common theme in the protests of those who refused to participate in Milgram’s study?
What are the implications of the classic confirmity/obedience studies?
• Behaviour and attitudes
→ Relationship is weak when external influences are overwhelming
• The power of the situation
→ Trying to break with social constraints shows us how powerful they are
• Avoiding committing the fundamental attribution error
→ e.g., recognising Milgram’s participants as ordinary people
What are the three pillars of Kelman’s model of social influence?
• Compliance
→ when someone accedes to influence in order to achieve favorable reaction, to gain a tangible reward, or to avoid punishment
• Identification
→ occurs when people are influenced by another person because they want to establish or maintain a satisfying self-defining relationship with that person.
• Internalization
→ occurs when the individual views a message as truthful and valid. The ideas and actions are intrinsically satisfying and are integrated into the person’s value system
What types of power are the Kelman Social Influences based on?
What situational factors are the Kelman Social Influences dependent upon?
What are examples of soft tactics used to influence others?
What are examples of rational tactics used to influence others?
What are examples of strong tactics used to influence others?
→ sense of control
→ devaluation of the person being influenced
→ exploitation
What is compliance?
conformity that involves publicly acting in accord with social pressure while privately disagreeing
What is obedience?
compliance to an explicit command
Describe Sherif’s study of norm formation.
* when put together their answers eventually converge on one estimation
What is the Werther effect?
• publications of suicide tend to inspire others to copy it