social influence – conformity and integroup relations

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Social influence – conformity and integroup relations Lecture 14

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Social influence – conformity and integroup relations. Lecture 14. Social influence. Social influence = change of judgments, opinions and attitudes under the impact of judgments, opinions and attitudes of other people. Autokinetic effect. M. Sherif (1935) Optical illusion of moving light - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Lecture 14

Page 2: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Social influence

• Social influence = change of judgments, opinions and attitudes under the impact of judgments, opinions and attitudes of other people

Page 3: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Autokinetic effect

• M. Sherif (1935)– Optical illusion of moving light– Establishing individual norms (where is the

light point)– Introducing experimenter’s confederate with

different norm – Convergence of norms creation of a group

norm

Page 4: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Experimental equipment in autokinetic effect experiments

Page 5: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Two procedures

• I – first individual norms followed by creation of group norms

• II – first group norms followed by studies of individuals

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I day II day III day IV day

esti

mat

ed m

ovem

ent

of li

ght

person 1person 2person 3

Creation of a group norm

After: Sherif & Sherif, 1969

Page 7: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations
Page 8: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Autokinetic effect

• Reversed procedure: – First creation of the group norm– Afterwards: subjects studied individually– Effect: persistance of the group norm

Page 9: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Conformity

• Solomon Asch (1951)• Comparison of lines (line matching)• 18 trials• 7 persons, including one naive participant

and six confederates of the experimenter• Participant – position 6

Page 10: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations
Page 11: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Table arrangement

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2

3 4 5

7

6

Page 12: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations
Page 13: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Experimental design

• 37 trials: participantsloudly announce results of comparisons

• 6 neutral trials: the first two trials + 4 randomly distributed confederates gave correct answer

• 31 trials conderates give wrong answers

Page 14: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Results

• Control group: 37 subjects - 35 persons without error

• Experimental group: – 37% errors– only 25% subjects without any error– 28% subjects - 8 or more errors– The majority - 1-7 errors

Page 15: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

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num

ber

of e

rror

s

control

pressure ofmajority

Results of Solomon Asch experiment

Page 16: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Mechanisms of conforming behaviors

• Informational influence: others as source of information private conformity or conversion

• Normative influence :conformity through desire to be liked or fear of rejection/ridicule public conformity or compliance

Page 17: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Which type of influence when?

• Ambiguous stimuli conversion – eg. Autokinetic effect (Sherif)

• Unambiguous stimuli compliance– eg. Line matching (Asch)

Page 18: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Reducing conformity

• Increasing self-confidence in own perceptions• Devil’s advocate or having a supporter• Size of the group

Page 19: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Devil’s advocate or having a supporter

• Modification of Asch’s task I– Adding one person who „saw” like subject– Result: drop in conformity

• Modification of Asch’s task II – Adding a person who gave even more

extreme answers than rest of the group– Result: drop in conformity

Page 20: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

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35

control

pressure ofmajoritysupporter

Role of a supporter in reducing compliance

Page 21: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Credibility of the supporter

• Eexperiment by Allen & Levine (1971) • Conditions:

– (a) Supporter known to have very poor vision (invalid social support))

– (b) Supporter known to have good vision (valid social support))

• Results: Conformity higher in (a) than (b) but lower than in no support condition

Page 22: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Role of social support: credible and incredible supporter

00,10,20,3

0,40,50,60,7

0,80,9

1

no support

incrediblesupportercrediblesupporter

After: Allen i Levine, 1971

Page 23: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Increasing self-confidence in own perceptions

• Experiment by Ross, Bierbauer, Hoffman (1976)– Asch’s paradigm– Ss paid for correct answers– Ss informed that other Ss were in different payoff

conditions

• Results: drop in conformity

Page 24: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Instruction differentiating experimental conditions

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control

pressure ofmajorityother payoffconditions

Exp. Ross, Bierbrauer & Hoffman, 1976)

Page 25: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Size of group

• Conformity inversely related to the power function of the size of the group

• Conformity depends on size of the group that inserts pressure and size of the group that is subject to pressure (Social Influence Model by Tanford & Penrod)

Page 26: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Social Influence Model by Tanford & Penrod

Page 27: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Culture and conformity (obedience to the authority of the elders)

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conformity

After: Garbarino & Bronfenbrenner, 1976

Page 28: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations
Page 29: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Minority influence

• Serge Moscovici (1976)

• Minority inserts influence through consistency

Page 30: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Eexperiment by Moscovici

• Task: colour perception, 36 blue slides • Conditions: 6 persons, including 2

confederates (position 1 and 4)

Page 31: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Experimental design

1

23 4

5

6

participants

Page 32: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Experimental conditions:

• Consistent condition: green on all trials• Inconsistent condition: :

– „green” - 24 times– „blue” - 12 times  

• Results: consistent minority inducedmore change

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Results

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licz

ba b

łędó

w

controlhigh consistencylow consistency

After: Moscovici, Lage & Naffrechoux, 1969)

Page 34: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Mechanisms of majority & minority influences

• Majority compliance without conversion (normative influence)

• Minority conversion without compliance (informational influence)

Page 35: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Minority influence: normative or informational?

Page 36: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations
Page 37: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations
Page 38: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

After image of blue

Page 39: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

After image of green

Page 40: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Colour of after image as measure of type of conformity (compliance vs.

konversion)

• After image yellow seen blue normative influence

• After image purple seen green informational influence

Page 41: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Experiment: Moscovici & Personnaz (1980)

• Task: colour recognition + naming the colour of the after-image

• 5 blue slides– after image of blue yellow-orange– after image of green red-purple

• Procedure: 4 stages

Page 42: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Stage I

• Private (without confederate)– write down the colour– rate the after-image

yellow purple

1 9

Page 43: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Feedback information

Ss informed that their response shared by :

81.8 % people 18,2% people

Subject in majority Subject in minority

The remaining percentage saw GREEN

Page 44: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Stage II

• 15 trials (with confederate)• tested in pairs• name of the colour given publicly• no judgment of after image• the first subject (confederate) said

GREEN • this perceived as a minority (1) or

majority (2) response

Page 45: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Stage III

• With confederate• 15 trials• Privacy conditions: writing down the colour

+rating the after-image

Page 46: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Stage IV

• Private and without confederate• writing down the colour +rating the after-

image

• Results: more conversion in minority conditions

Page 47: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Results

Page 48: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Obedience

Page 49: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Obedience

• Stanley Milgram (1933-1984)

Page 50: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Experimental creation of obedience (Milgram, 1974)

• Teacher – pupil• Punishing errors• Voltage: 15-450 V• 26/40 subjects continued to the very end

Page 51: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Remote condition

100

80

60

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20

10

Lekki Umiarkowany

Silny B. silny Intensywny

B.intensywny

Niebezp. 450V

„uczeń” wali w ścianę, potemmilknie

Uczeń waliw ścianę, protestując

Aż 65% badanychposłuchało, aplikując„uczniowi” śmiertelnądawkę prądu

% badanych

Siła szoku

Page 52: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Results

Page 53: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Predicted and real results

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predictedmalesfemales

After: Milgram (1974)

Page 54: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Factors that enable obedience

• Gradual escalation• Experimenter’s detachment

Page 55: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Reducing obedience

• Two experimenters who disagree whether to continue or not

• Rebelling confederates (one stopping at 150 V, another at 210 V)

• Experimenter giving orders by telephone• Ss being close to the “pupil” or touching him• Ss having to choose whether to give the next shock• Another „subject” giving orders instead of an

experimenter

Page 56: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Reducing obedience

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70pr

ocen

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ób

originalexperimentexperimenter notpresentanother subjectgiving orders

After: Milgram (1974)

Page 57: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

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proc

ent

osób remote

voice-feedbackproximityproximity-touch

Reducing obedience – manipulating closeness of the victim

Milgram, 1963, 1965)

Page 58: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Are dispositions altogether not important?

• ??

Page 59: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Other examples of social influence

• Social facilitation

• Social loafing

Page 60: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Social facilitation

Page 61: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Social facilitation

• 1897 - Triplett – cyclists ride faster when in group than when alone

• Robert Zajonc (1965): The mere presence effect

Page 62: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Results

• Presence of others facilitates performance on easy tasks, impedes performance on complex tasks

• Subjects: people, cockroaches

Page 63: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Explanations

• Level of arousal (R. B. Zajonc)• Evaluation anxiety (N. B. Cottrell)• Others as distractors (G.S. Sanders, R.S.

Baron, D.L. Moore)

Page 64: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Level of arousal

Presence of others

Increased arousal increased drive

Increased probability od dominant reaction

Facilitation on easy task

Handicap on difficult task

After: Zajonc (1965, 1980)

Page 65: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Evaluation anxiety

Presence of others

Evaluation anxiety No anxiety

No effectarousal

Intensification of dominant reaction

Facilitation on easy task

Handicap on difficult task

Page 66: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Others as distractors

Distraction

Lowered performance Increased effort

Difficult task Easy task

Worse performance Better performance

Page 67: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Social loafing

Page 68: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations
Page 69: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Social loafing

• 1882/1887: Ringelman – pulling a line in groups: one- , two – three -, eight persons– 1 person - 63 kg– 2 persons - 118 kg (loss - 8 kg)– 3 persons - 160 kg (loss - 29 kg)– 8 persons - loss 256 kg

• Bibb Latane:– pulling line– aplauding– shouting

Page 70: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Social loafing

Page 71: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Social loafing

Cooperation lowers individual performance

Page 72: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Explanation

Group productivity

Potentialproductivity

Coordinationlosses

Motivationallosses

= - -

Social loafing results from:•Decrease in motivation

•Decrease in coordination

Page 73: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

After: Latane, Williams i Harkins (1979)

Page 74: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Social loafing disappears when:

• Performance of individual members is supervised

• Each member has clear standards of performance

• Task is engaging• Group is coherent (group morale)• An individual knows that he or she is good

and that the group outcome depends on the best performance

Page 75: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

After: Zaccaro, 1984

Page 76: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Other examples of „social loafing”

• Public vs. private property

• „free-riding”

Page 77: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Group tasks and group productivity

Page 78: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Group performance

Group performance

Potential groupperformance

Losses

Page 79: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Types of group tasks (Ivan Steiner)

• Additive tasks– Group performance = sum of performances of group members (eg.

Pulling line, applauding etc.)

• Disjunctive tasks– Group performance depends on performance of the best member

(eg. Creative tasks, solving problems)

• Conjunctive tasks– Group performanve depends on performance of the worst member

(eg. Mountain climbing)

• Additive and disjunctive tasks = groups better than individual members

• Conjunctive tasks – individual members better than groups

Page 80: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Leadership

Page 81: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Types of leaders(Bales & Slater)

• Social-emotional leader– Cares about good atmosphere in a group

• Task leader– Imposes structure, organizes communication etc. .

Page 82: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Two types of leaders and group productivity (I. Steiner)

Actual productivity

Potential productivity

Losses in productivity

Task leader increases this

Social-emotional

leader decreases this

Page 83: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Group productivity

Potential productivity

Coordinationlosses

Motivationallosses

= - -

Social-emotional leader

Task leader

Page 84: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Risky shift & group polarization effect

Page 85: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Risky shift

• Stoner (1961): Group decisions more risky than decisions of individual members

Page 86: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Group polarization

• Moscovici & Zavalloni (1969): group opinions more polarized than individual opinions

• Direction of polarization depends on initial average group opinion

Page 87: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Group polarization

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before after

dyskusji

atti

tude

De-Gaulle

US foreingpolicy

After: Moscovici & Zavalloni, 1969)

Page 88: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Group polarization effects

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tude

prejudiced unprejudiced

before discussionafter discussion

After: Meyers & Bishop, 1970

Page 89: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Possible mechanisms of risky shift

• Festinger – Theory of social comparisons– Social value of risk (everybody wants to be more

risky than others)– Comparison with others higher motivation to

take risky decisions

Page 90: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Risk value

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peermyselfadmired persons

After: Levinger & Schneider, 1969

Page 91: Social influence – conformity and integroup relations

Explanations of group polarization

• Burnstein i Vinokur: more available arguments during group discussion polarization effect

• Tesser’s effect – thinking about a target leads to polarization of an attitude

• Stability of extreme positions: undecided persons more more towards extreme positions than the other way round