1 / 14

The Power of the Situation Chapter 16

The Power of the Situation Chapter 16. Music: “He Got Game” Public Enemy. Agenda. 1. Social Psychology: A) Definition B) Roles and Rules: Zimbardo’s Prison Experiment 2. Conformity: Asch’s Experiments 3. Obedience to Authority: A) Milgram’s Experiment B) Foot-in-the-door phenomena

brygid
Download Presentation

The Power of the Situation Chapter 16

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Power of the SituationChapter 16 Music: “He Got Game” Public Enemy

  2. Agenda • 1. Social Psychology: • A) Definition • B) Roles and Rules: • Zimbardo’s Prison Experiment • 2. Conformity: • Asch’s Experiments • 3. Obedience to Authority: • A) Milgram’s Experiment • B) Foot-in-the-door phenomena • 4. Attribution Error • 5. Deception in Psychological Studies • 6. Movie: “Power of the Situation” DVD # 10683

  3. Reminder: Online Course Evaluation! • Check the course website for the link Thank You!

  4. 1. Social Psychology: • A): Definition • Scientific study of how individuals behave, think and feel in social situations • How we are affected by the actual, or implied presence of others (p. 664) • How we relate to one another (next week) • How social pressures can exert significant influence on behaviour (this week) • E.g. Influence of cults; Jonestown mass suicide • B) Social Roles and Rules • Social role: • Socially defined pattern of behavior that is expected of a person when functioning in a given setting • See social schemas (p. 666) • E.g. Guards vs. prisoners

  5. B) Zimbardo’s Prison Experiment (1973) • Corruption in prisons: • Bad seeds, or bad soil? • Study: • 22 subjects screened for psychological maturity and health • Randomly assigned to role of guard or prisoner • Guards: • worked 8-hour shift • Wore uniform, whistle and club • Task=maintain reasonable degree of order • Prisoners: • stayed in mock prison 24hrs/day • Wore degrading uniform • Depersonalized • Lived in bare cells without personal belongings/dehumanized • Therefore, no moral considerations apply?

  6. B) Zimbardo’s Experiment (cont’d) • Results: • After 6 days of role simulation: • Indoctrination into roles that could not be attributed to personal dispositions • Guards devised cruel routines • Prisoners broke down • Study had to be called off. • Prisoner abuse • Process of deindividuation, devaluation of the prisoners, and power differential • Prisons are “bad soil” • http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=5474164325345921501 • 2. Conformity • Adjusting our behavior or thinking to bring it in line with some group standard • Solomon Asch’s experiment (early 50’s) • People can be led to say “black” • when they see “white” • Why do we conform?

  7. 2. Factors that promote conformity: • Group size (p. 688) • Group unanimity • Ambiguity of situation • You identify with group members/ In group pressure • Also see “groupthink” (p. 695)

  8. 3. Obedience to Authority: • Would you electrocute a stranger? • A) Milgram’s study: • http://tinyurl.com/2njwm9 • Emerged from a need to understand the Holocaust and the ways in which obedience could lead to the death of millions of people • Details on the experimental situation provided in lecture • Conclusions: • Ordinary people, following authority, can become agents of aggression • Legitimate authority: • Someone who has the right to dictate behavior within a particular setting. • Conditions for disobedience: • Experimenter left the room or was replaced by an ordinary man • The victim was right there in the room • Participant worked with peers who refused to go further

  9. 3. b) Foot-in-the-door technique • Get people to comply to small requests, and you will be more likely to have them comply to greater requests later (p. 703) • Study in California: • (Described in class) • Lawn sign: 17% say “yes” • #1 License plate sticker: 65% say “yes” • #2 Lawn sign: 76% say “yes”

  10. 4. Attribution Error • Attribution Dimensions: • Internal/external; stable/unstable (Fig. 16.3, p. 670)

  11. 4. Fundamental Attribution Error: • More likely to make internal attribution and underestimate situational influences for others’ behaviour (p. 671)

  12. 4. Attribution Error • Why do we blame the victim? • Just world hypothesis: • World is fair and we get what we deserve • Also called defensive attribution bias (p. 672) • Self-Serving Bias: • Tendency to make internal attributions for positive events, and external ones for negative events that happen to us (except for depressives) • Conclusions: • The power of explanations

  13. 5. Ethics of Deception • Is it acceptable for psychologists to lie to subjects in the name of research? • Pros: • Cons: • Ethics committees: Now require deception to be kept to a minimum, and to be justified.

  14. 5. Movie: “Power of the Situation” • Excellent film, with several clips from studies described in this lecture • Available at the Sound and Moving Image Library in Scott (DVD # 10683) • 2 exam questions will be extracted from this movie

More Related