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SOCIAL INFLUENCE: HOW DO GROUPS INFLUENCE AN INDIVIDUAL’S BEHAVIOR? AP Psychology Chapter 18
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Quick Write: If you could do anything humanly possible with complete assurance that you would not be detected or held responsible, what would you do?” David Dodd – 5 years worth of experiments developed 4 categories to classify responses Prosocial (behavior intended to help others) Antisocial (intended to injure or deprive others of rights) Nonnormative (violates social norms, but doesn’t specifically help or harm others) Neutral (doesn’t fall into the above)
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Social Influence = The process where the words or actions of other people influence a person’s behavior Norms – learned, socially based rules that prescribe what people should or should not do in a situation Norms are not universal – vary by culture
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Deindividuation A psychological state in which a person becomes submerged in the group and loses a sense of individuality Become a part of a “herd” – may perform acts they would not normally do otherwise
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The Impact of the Presence of Others… Social facilitation – the presence of other people improves a person’s individual performance Social impairment – the presence of others impairs performance Social loafing – people exert less effort in group situations, than when performing alone “hide in the crowd” “get away” loafing Group polarization – opinions are strengthened after listening to an extreme position that favors that opinion Groupthink – members of a group stress unity over a potential conflict
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Conformity & Compliance Conformity – Changing behavior or beliefs to match those of others – result of group pressure Compliance – People adjust their behavior because of a request Asch Experiment – examined how people would respond when they were faced with a norm that existed, but was obviously wrong – 75% of his test subjects agreed with majority’s wrong answer in his experiment Asch Experiment
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Inducing Compliance Foot-in-the-door – getting people to agree to a small request and then gradually presenting larger ones Door-in-the-face – begins with a large request that will likely be denied – person making request substitutes it with a lesser alternative That’s-not-all – offering an additional product to someone before presenting them with the actual product, thus enticing them by adding more options Low-ball approach – obtaining oral commitment from someone to do something…once commitment is made, the cost of fulfilling is increased and the person feels obligated to comply
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Obedience Change in behavior in response to a demand from an authority figure Stanley Milgram – studies on obedience – “shocking” experiments Stanley Milgram 3 main factors that affect obedience: 1. Status or prestige of the person giving the order 2. Behavior of others in the same situation 3. Personal characteristics of the individual
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The Stanford Prison Experiment http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z0jYx8nwjFQ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z0jYx8nwjFQ http://www.prisonexp.org/ http://www.prisonexp.org/
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Helping Behaviors Altruism – unselfish concern with another person’s welfare Cost-reward model – People feel badly when they see someone suffering. C-R model = weighing several options in order to reduce the unpleasant feeling associated with witnessing distress Reciprocal altruism – assisting another person with the expectation that the person will repay the deed
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Non-Helping Behavior Bystander effect – the more people there are who witness an emergency, the less likely it is that any one of them will help – you think someone else will help the victim Kitty Genovese Kitty Genovese Diffusion of responsibility – not intervening in the presence of others because the person thinks that others are going to intervene in the situation
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Why is all this important? Deindividuation = loss of restraint when part of a group Groups = tendency to see in black and white Individual = can see “gray areas” What would you do? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sam3deneMgk http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sam3deneMgk
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Homework: Violate a Social Norm Choose a behavior that you believe will violate a common social norm. Carry out that behavior. Write up: Why did you select this behavior? How did other people react? How did you feel while violating the norm? Example Violations: Face backward in an elevator Go into a restaurant, be seated, examine the menu, leave w/o ordering Wear a big winter coat on a hot day Sing in a quiet room or a public place where that doesn’t normally happen Have a conversation with an imaginary friend in the presence of others Sustain eye contact with someone’s foot during an entire conversation
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