Ecological validity and Milgram’s study

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Class Test Feedback (out of 24 marks)
Advertisements

Explanations of why people obey incl: Independent behaviour
SOCIAL INFLUENCE Explanations of independent behaviour.
SOCIAL INFLUENCE Obedience Social Psychology Miss Bird.
Psychology The usefulness of psychological research.
Understanding Ethics in Psychology
Assessment 1 Social Psychology. AO1 knowledge and understanding Summarise the aims and context of Milgram's (1963) research 'Behavioural study of obedience'.
VALIDITY IS THE RESEARCH MEASURING WHAT IT AIMED TO MEASURE?
Conformity and Obedience. CONFORMITY “ The tendency to change our perceptions, opinions, or behaviour in ways that are consistent with group norms” (Brehm,
AICE.Milgram.
Would People Still Obey Today?
The task The task: You need to create a set of slides to use as your evaluation tools Once created please print them out and bring to your lesson. Use.
What is obedience? Lesson 2 – Social Learning Unit 2 – Understanding other people.
Obedience FURTHER RESEARCH AND EXPLANATIONS FOR WHY PEOPLE OBEY.
Social Influence -Obedience Lesson Objectives: 1)To define obedience 2)To look at key study of obedience Stanley Milgram (1963) 1)To begin to look at situational.
Validity The degree to which an assessment, test or operationalised variable measures (a) what is intended, as opposed to (b) what is not intended, or.
Obedience Past Paper Questions & Mark Schemes Peer Assessment.
Explanations of why people obey. Milgram demonstrated the power that a situation has in shaping behaviour. It seems that sometimes our compassion and.
Options in Applied Psychology G543 Generic exam advice.
Social psychology – Lesson 3
What did Zimbardo’s research tell us about social roles?
Social Psychology – Key Question
Would People Still Obey Today?
SOCIAL.
Lesson 4 Cognitive Psychology.
Social Psychology – Key Question
Social Psychology Classic Study
Social Psychology – Key Question
Psychology and Research Methods
Obedience to authority
Social Influence Lesson 6.
RECAP Whiteboard relay… Outline and evaluate Milgram’s original obedience study (12)
Social Influence Revision
4.3 Classic Evidence: Loftus and Palmer (1974)
Retrieval Failure Theory of Forgetting
Recap Key-Terms Cognitivism Non-Cognitivism Realism Anti-Realism
Social Influence Explanations of resistance to social influence, including social support and locus of control.
The BIG Idea EXPERIMENTS
Identify key terms from definitions
Obedience Today.
Obedience: Social-psychological factors
Research Methods in Psychology
The clock is ticking! In pairs, you have 2 minutes to write down as many words or studies associated with obedience and agency theory as you can. Use popplet.
Nature of Obedience.
4.3 Classic Evidence: Loftus and Palmer (1974)
Methodology of the Behaviourist Approach
Obedience: Milgram’s Research
Social Influence Mini Mock
Evaluating a study A very GRAVE business.
We are going outside grab your coats
Obedience: Milgram’s Research
Why do people obey?.
IS THE RESEARCH MEASURING WHAT IT AIMED TO MEASURE?
Nature of Obedience.
Evaluating a study A very GRAVE business.
Evaluating a study A very GRAVE business.
G r a v e AO3 EVALUATE GENERALISABILITY VALIDITY
Types of Experiments Lab Field Natural Quasi.
Recap task Think of fifteen key terms associated with analogy Choose nine and add to the bingo grid Play bingo.
IS THE RESEARCH MEASURING WHAT IT AIMED TO MEASURE?
Welcome to Yale University
M3 D2 Effectively lead a team & evaluate your leadership abilities
Chapter 4 Summary.
Lesson 3: In pairs or 3’s, discuss what we have been talking about in the last two lessons What are the key terms? Main points? What did you learn that.
Social Influence Topic Tuesday.
Dr Helen Owton TMA05.
AS Psychology Research Methods
Validity This refers to the extent to which the test measures what it claims to measure If an IQ test actually measures intelligence = valid However,
Validity This refers to the extent to which the test measures what it claims to measure If an IQ test actually measures intelligence = valid However,
Presentation transcript:

Ecological validity and Milgram’s study Population validity Task validity

What is external validity? External validity is an umbrella term, meaning that it captures more than one idea but overall it can be defined as… “The extent to which findings can be generalised beyond the context of the original study”

Ecological validity Findings that have been discovered in a laboratory (controlled environment) may not generalise well to real world settings; this is sometimes called ecological validity Ecology is about ‘habitats’; you need to think about the natural habitats in which we might see certain behaviours that we are interested in and ask would we get the same results in the real world as we did in the lab; if so we have ‘good ecological validity’.

Task validity Task validity refers to whatever it was that the participants actually had to do in the study, what was their task? Was the task similar to something that they might find themselves doing in everyday life? Often experiments involve tasks which are very artificial, meaning they were designed specifically for the study. These sort of tasks lack mundane realism, i.e. they are not the ordinary everyday sorts of things that people generally do .

Population validity External validity also refers to the extent to which the same findings might be found outside of the original intended target population, e.g. other cultures This is known as population validity. There are lots of replications of Milgram’s study in countries such as South Africa, Jordan and Australia, even Germany, the country Milgram was originally interested in. We will look at the impact of culture on obedience in another lesson. Extension; if you want to see if you can find the obedience rates in these countries and any others you can find go ahead! Find a world map image on googe images and create a ‘map of obedience’ to stick in your red book.

Milgram’s study You will need to be able to give strengths and weaknesses relating to Milgram’s study When you create your chains of reason make sure you pack them with key words such as… Artificial behaviour Artificial task Natural behaviour Real world Everyday life Mundane realism

Task validity Think about exactly what Milgram was asking his participants to do How common is this sort of task in the real world? Can you think of any types of people who might be ordered to harm others in their every day lives? If so, how is your example similar/different to what Milgram’s Pps had to do? Think in detail. Why are these differences important what do they tell us about the validity of Milgram’s findings?

Ecological validity Where did Milgram’s study take place? How is this similar/different to the participants everyday life experiences? When and where are people given explicit orders in real life? How are these examples similar or different to Milgram’s study? What does this mean for the validity of Milgram’s study?

Some extra studies… Spend some time researching the following studies, you can then use their findings to explain whether you think Milgram’s study lacks external validity or not and why: Hofling (1966) Bickman (1974)

Applications to the real world When you are evaluating a study, it is also useful to think about whether the study has helps to understand or improve any real world situations, if it has this is a strength od the study and it also relates to external validity too The following slides provide two examples.

Explaining Holocaust behaviour Milgram’s findings have been used to explain the behaviour of Holocaust perpetrators, saying that they were just ordinary people who were driven by the desire to fulfil obligations to their superiors. However some critics argue that this explanation is not justified, e.g. David Mandel

David Mandel: Important differences Participants were told that the shocks would cause no permanent damage, the Holocaust perpetrators knew what they were doing when they killed unarmed civilians for example. When Milgram’s Pps realised that the learner wanted to withdraw his consent, obedience declined; the Holocaust victims clearly had not given consent to be tortured and killed When Milgram’s Pps could choose the voltage they chose very low levels whereas many Holocaust perpetrators were eager to carry out their roles often going beyond what they were commanded to do

Cockpit behaviour: Tarnow (2000) Milgram’s findings have been applied to improve commercial airline pilot training. First officers often fail to monitor and challenge errors made by the captain due to his/her legitimate authority; they are hesitant to question the captain even when his/her behaviour is putting others at risk. Tarnow believes training first officers in how to challenge the authority of the pilot could prevent up to 20% of plane crashes. This has led to training protocols to improve cockpit behaviour and potentially save lives

Using this information in your evaluative writing You might be asked to give to give strengths and weaknesses of Milgram’s study relating to applications to the real world How could you use the information on the previous slides?

Extension tasks You could also see what you can find out about … The McDonalds Strip Search Scam The Jonestown massacre Atrocities committed by US soldiers at Abu Ghraib Always think about the chain of command, who was the authority figure