exposure to
information or the social pressure of othersCompliance: Responding "yes" to a direct request
Obedience: Following a direct order from another person
Conformity, Compliance, and Obedience
FindSlide.org - это сайт презентаций, докладов, шаблонов в формате PowerPoint.
Email: Нажмите что бы посмотреть
Conformity, Compliance, and Obedience
NORMATIVE
(Clear, straightforward task, correct answer is apparent. Conform to majority to fit in or not stand out, influenced by peer pressure. Public acceptance, not internalization of beliefs e.g., Asch’s Research)
Movement in inches
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
SUBJECT 1
SUBJECT 2
SUBJECT 3
Some Incorrect Predictions
Some Incorrect Predictions (cont.)
Some Incorrect Predictions (cont.)
Solomon Asch
4
People
2 People
2 People
Compliance with paper answer = about 1.5% of the trials
Low Importance: 33% conformity
High Importance: 16% conformity
Group member supports your choice (an ally/partner)
What happens when the person supporting your position:
has to leave the group temporarily (e.g., go to a meeting) = less severe initial increase in conformity; partner’s support outlasts his presence
changes their mind and begins to agree with the group again (a “deserter”) = immediate increase of conformity – about as frequent as when faced with a unanimous majority
Only about 5.5% conformity with support of another
Most common Supreme Court decision?
9-0
Least common?
8-1
*
* Other Conformity Issues
“Stubborness does have its helpful features. You always know what you are going to be thinking tomorrow.” --- Glen Beaman
“You have enemies? Good. That means you've stood up for something, sometime in your life.” ~ Winston Churchill
“Our wretched species is so made that those who walk on the well-trodden path always throw stones at those who are showing a new road.” ~Voltaire
“Everything popular is wrong”
-- Oscar Wilde
50
40
30
20
10
0
Confederate Walks By
Clean Lot
Littered Lot
Confederate Litters (Descriptive Norm); What people do in this situation
Confederate Picks Up Trash (Injunctive Norm; Littering is wrong – taps into normative conformity)
% Littering
(handbill on car)
Most Powerful
Source: Reno, Cialdini, & Kallgren, 1993)
Descriptive norm only works in the clean lot (littering was seen as unusual; most people don’t litter)
Source: Schultz, Nolan, Cialdini,. Goldstein, & Griskevicius (2007)