Social Psychology 11/19/98

Social Psychology: The Power of the Situation

Conformity

Sherif Paradigm

Private acceptance

The Asch Paradigm

Public compliance

The Nature of Conformity in the two paradigms

Informational pressure, & Social Comparison Theory

Public compliance & Normative Social pressure

Contagion

 

 


Social Psychology

Looks at how the real or imagined presence of others (a.k.a., the social situation) influences individual behavior.

 


Conformity: The Bad and the Good

 


Conformity Defined

A change in behavior or belief as a result of real or imagined group pressure.

 


Sherif & Autokinetic Effect

Autokinetic Effect--The illusion that a stationary spot of light is moving when viewed in a darkened room.

 


Sherif and the Autokinetic Effect: Group Norms

Main Points:

The task is very ambiguous (estimates of movement ranged from 2 inches to 80 feet!)

Using an ambiguous stimulus, found that group norms quickly formed.

When tested privately, even a year later, subjects stick to group norm.

 


Along comes Asch with an Unambiguous task

 

 


The Asch Paradigm

 

 


What Asch Found

subjects conformed 37% of the time

size of the group and the magic number 3

ambiguity of the judgment

status of the group members

presence of other dissenters from the group norm

individual and cultural differences.

 


The Nature of Conformity in the Sherif and Asch Paradigms

 


Social Comparison Theory

Social comparison theory says that we want to know if our opinions are correct and how good our abilities are.

 

Critically, to the extent that physical reality is ambiguous, we become increasingly dependent upon "social reality."

 


Social Comparison in Action

Fire Alarms

Remember Fear and Affiliation

Lines at Secretary of State


So, Social Comparison theory tells us that one power the group has is informational power. This power can lead to conformity and private acceptance.

 


A Second Power is called Normative Power. Normative power is the power that arises because the individual believes that failure to conform may lead to punishment.

 


The Case of Johnny Rocco

 


Contagion: An effect that looks like conformity but isn't

 


Steps to Contagion

An observer is motivated to behave in a certain way.

The observer knows how to perform the behavior in question, but is not performing it.

The observer sees a model perform the behavior.

The observer then performs the behavior.