Chapter 15
Flashcards
Key Terms
Social influence: efforts by individuals or groups to change the attitudes and/or behaviour of other people.
Conformity: changes in behaviour and/or attitudes occurring in response to group pressure.
Normative influence: conformity based on people’s desire to be liked and/or respected by others.
Informational influence: conformity based on the perceived greater knowledge or judgment of others.
Compliance: a majority’s influence on a minority determined by the majority’s power and authority.
Conversion: a minority’s influence on a majority by persuading the majority of the correctness of its views.
Agentic state: feeling controlled by an authority figure and therefore lacking a sense of personal responsibility.
Groupthink: pressure to achieve agreement in groups in which dissent is suppressed; it can lead to disastrous decisions.
Social roles: the parts we play as members of social groups based on certain expectations about the behaviour that is appropriate.
Norms: standards or rules of behaviour that operate within a group.
Deindividuation: loss of a sense of personal identity; it can occur in a large group or crowd.
Weblinks
Is it human nature to conform?: The research of Asch, Milgram, and Zimbardo.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/3300635.stm
A video about Asch’s conformity experiment
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iRh5qy09nNw
A biography of Solomon E. Asch, and more information on his research
http://www.brynmawr.edu/aschcenter/about/solomon.htm
A useful summary of Stanley Milgram’s research
https://explorable.com/stanley-milgram-experiment
Resisting authority: A personal account of one of Milgram’s participants
http://www.jewishcurrents.org/2004-jan-dimow.htm
Good detail on the contribution of Stanley Milgram to psychology
http://muskingum.edu/~psych/psycweb/history/milgram.htm
An extended BBC article on the My Lai Massacre (an example of groupthink)
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/64344.stm
The Stanford prison experiment website
http://www.prisonexp.org/
A lecture by Philip Zimbardo on the psychology of evil
http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/en/philip_zimbardo_on_the_psychology_of_evil.html
Can good people really turn bad? Re-visiting the Stanford prison experiment
http://bps-research-digest.blogspot.com/2007/05/can-good-people-really-turn-bad-re.html
The official site for the BBC Prison Study by Reicher and Haslam (2006)
http://www.bbcprisonstudy.org/
A useful summary of Le Bon’s theory of the nature of crowds
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bCAhKGhYzh0
Dr John Drury explores the positives of crowd behaviour
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9fVPQ6X4Fw8