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‘Behavioural study of Obedience’, Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 67:371-8. Social Approach. Core Study 1: Milgram (1963). 1. Approach & Behaviour : Milgram. Social Approach Insight into obedience and why people follow orders when the obedience will be destructive.
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‘Behavioural study of Obedience’, Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 67:371-8 Social Approach Core Study 1: Milgram (1963)
1. Approach & Behaviour: Milgram • Social Approach • Insight into obedience and why people follow orders when the obedience will be destructive
2. Aim & Hypothesis: Milgram • What was the aim of this study? • Where does an aim come from?
5. Sample & Participants: Milgram How did Milgram recruit his sample: Describe who was part of Milgram’s sample. (Number, gender, backgrounds of those individuals)
Procedure of: Milgram • Describe the controls Milgram used in his study? • Prods • Machinery
7. Data Collection: Milgram • What quantitative data did Milgram record? • What qualitative data did Milgram record?
8. Results: Which hypothesis did Milgram prove? Situational or Dispositional
8. Results/Findings: Milgram Using the information provided write down 8 results. Your results should include both qualitative and quantitative results.
9. Conclusions: Milgram For each conclusion, list one result to support it. 1. People will obey others they consider to be legitimate authority figures, even when they are asked to do geos against their moral beliefs. 2. People find the experience of receiving and obeying destructive orders highly stressful as they will obey despite their emotional response.
9. Conclusions: Milgram For each conclusion, list one result to support it. 3. Evil acts can be done by ordinary people. 4. People obey because certain situation features lead them to suspend their sense of autonomy and become agents of authority firgures.