Asch HJ

Variables affecting conformity
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Slide 1: Tekstslide
PsychologyUpper Secondary (Key Stage 4)BTEC

In deze les zitten 64 slides, met interactieve quizzen, tekstslides en 4 videos.

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Variables affecting conformity

Slide 1 - Tekstslide

Slide 2 - Tekstslide

Slide 3 - Video

Slide 4 - Tekstslide

Slide 5 - Tekstslide

Key Details
123 particpants
all male 
all students from 3 institutions
18 trials
12 critical trials

Slide 6 - Tekstslide

generally summarised to 1/3

Slide 7 - Tekstslide

Factors affecting Confomity
Group size
Unanimity
Task Difficulty

Slide 8 - Tekstslide

How many people in a group do you think that you need to bring about normative social influence NSI?
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10

Slide 9 - Poll

Group Size
Group Size
Discuss

Slide 10 - Tekstslide

What size group was needed to have a significant effect
A
3
B
5
C
10
D
15

Slide 11 - Quizvraag

Group Size
Little conformity at 1-2

steep increase at 3

little change after 3

Slide 12 - Tekstslide

Unanimity
What if the person says what you are thinking?

 

What if they give a different wrong answer?

Slide 13 - Tekstslide

Ally gives the same answer you are thinking the conformity would drop from 33% to_________
A
0
B
5.5
C
9.5
D
15.5

Slide 14 - Quizvraag

The other wrong answer
A
20
B
10
C
9
D
2

Slide 15 - Quizvraag

Unanimity
what if the person says what you are thinking?
5.5%

what if they give a different wrong answer?
9%

Slide 16 - Tekstslide

Slide 17 - Video

Task Difficulty 
Generalised conclusion, conformity increases because?
  • You have the original NSI
  • but you then get ISI
  • 0verall conformity will therefore be higher
Procedure
Task difficulty is increased by making the lines closer in length

Slide 18 - Tekstslide

Complete the numbers Quiz

Slide 19 - Tekstslide

Complete School examples 

Slide 20 - Tekstslide

3
123
12
5.5%
9%
75%
33%
18
conformed once
critical trials
pps
ally correct answer
ally different answer
group size
overall conformity
Total trials

Slide 21 - Sleepvraag

A child of its time
This can be a four layered evaluation.

1. Based on the definition of McCarthyism - would we expect higher or lower conformity now?
a vociferous campaign against alleged communists in the US government and other institutions carried out under Senator Joseph McCarthy in the period 1950–4. Many of the accused were blacklisted or lost their jobs, though most did not in fact belong to the Communist Party.

Slide 22 - Tekstslide

Layer 1
A limitation of the work of Asch’s experiment is it could be considered a ‘child of its time’ because it was carried out in a time of McCarthyism where people were scared to go against the majority and so more likely to conform.

(lacks temporal validity)

Slide 23 - Tekstslide

What is the relevance of Perrin and Spencer to the temporal validity of Asch?

Slide 24 - Tekstslide

Layer 2
Perrin and Spencer then tested this by repeating it in the 1980s and found that there was very little conformity suggesting as the times have changed conformity rates have declined.

Slide 25 - Tekstslide

Any issues with the population validity of this study

Slide 26 - Tekstslide

Layer 3
However, the sample in this case was engineering students and they may have had high self-confidence in the task which buffered them from the pressure of conformity. 

Slide 27 - Tekstslide

Perrin and Spencer
Repeated the study this time using juvenile delinquents as the subjects and probation officers as the group.

They found similar findings as Asch
Why might there be issues with this study and what might it therefore tell us about conformity?

Slide 28 - Tekstslide

Layer 4
Indeed, in a follow up on juvenile delinquents and their probation officer’s similar levels were found to Asch showing that conformity is determined by the perceived cost of not conformity in any given situation. 

Slide 29 - Tekstslide

E1 - A limitation of the work of Asch’s experiment is it could be considered a ‘child of its time’ because it was carried out in a time of McCarthyism where people were scared to go against the majority and so more likely to conform
  • A limitation of the work of Asch’s experiment is it could be considered a ‘child of its time’ because it was carried out in a time of McCarthyism where people were scared to go against the majority and so more likely to conform.
  • Perrin and Spencer then tested this by repeating it in the 1980s and found that there was very little conformity suggesting as the times have changed conformity rates have declined. However, the sample in this case was engineering students and they may have had high self-confidence in the task which buffered them from the pressure of conformity. 
  • Indeed, in a follow up on juvenile delinquents and their probation officer’s similar levels were found to Asch showing that conformity is determined by the perceived cost of not conformity in any given situation. 

Slide 30 - Tekstslide

Demand Characteristics

  1. Demand Characteristics are when pps in an experiment work out the nature of the experiment and this results in a change in their behaviour
Real life example

  1. A good way to think about this is when a teacher is observing one of your lessons, the behaviour of the students tends to change considerably as they know they are being watched

Slide 31 - Tekstslide

Slide 32 - Video

Question
Do you think it is a reasonable criticism that the confederates may have been unconvincing?
If we assume they were how could the issue be solved?
timer
1:00

Slide 33 - Tekstslide

The issue of unconvincing confederates

Slide 34 - Tekstslide

Slide 35 - Tekstslide

E2 - There may also have been an issue with unconvincing confederates in Asch’s study.
  •  It would have been difficult for them to act convincingly when giving wrong answers.
  • Demand characteristics may therefore have led to participants changing the behaviour and the results may therefore not be valid. Mori and Arai however tested this by giving all participants polarized glasses so they saw different things.
  • The results of the experiments were close to Asch’s results suggesting that the confederates did act convincingly and the results of Asch can therefore be considered valid. 

Slide 36 - Tekstslide

The magic number in terms of group size was
A
10
B
7
C
2
D
3

Slide 37 - Quizvraag

E3 - The issue of group size
  • Asch says that three was a sufficient number for maximal influence but Bond points out that no studies other than Asch have used a majority greater than nine. We therefore we know very little about the effect of larger majority sizes on conformity levels.

Slide 38 - Tekstslide

Why might someone argue that Asch is a study of non-conformity rather than conformity?

Slide 39 - Tekstslide

E4 - Most did not conform
  • Although the research has been recognised as ground breaking, all it shows is that the minority of the participants would conform, with only 33% average conformity rate the majority of the participants would not conform even with overwhelming majority influence. 
  • This suggests that the study is more focused on non-conformity as most did not conform, this also highlights key validity issues that arise with this study.

Slide 40 - Tekstslide

Collectivist
Individualistic

Slide 41 - Tekstslide

Do you think both cultural types would conform equally?
Explain your answer

Slide 42 - Tekstslide

E5 - Cultural Differences
  • There are also cultural differences. Asch used American students in his study so there is a lack of population validity. 
  • Smith (06) found that in individualistic cultures typical conformity rates are about 25% whereas in collectivist cultures where conformity is more encouraged conformity rates are higher at 37%. 
  • The type of societal norms therefore has a significant impact on conformity rates.

Slide 43 - Tekstslide

Slide 44 - Tekstslide

Ethical Issues

Informed Consent


Right to withdraw


Solutions

pps need to know all about the study and sign a consent form

pps must be able to withdraw from the study at any point and withhold their data


Slide 45 - Tekstslide

Ethical Issues
Deception



Confidentiality



Harm
Solutions
pps should not be deceived, if they are there should be a debrief and support provided

pps should not have their names exposed, so initials should be used to protect identity

protection from physical and psychological harm

Slide 46 - Tekstslide

Question
Explain the ethical issues within this study.
Confidentiality
Privacy
Right to Withdraw
 Informed Consent
 Deception 
Harm
timer
0:03

Slide 47 - Tekstslide

Do you think the knowledge gained outweighed the ethical violations?

Yes
No
Fence sitters

Slide 48 - Poll

Slide 49 - Tekstslide

Reliability
Validity
Irrelevannt
Consistency
Realistic
Exciting
Dependable

Slide 50 - Sleepvraag

Reliability
  •  In order to assess results and conclusions data must be replicable.

  • Only if it is replicable can you see if the data is reliable (consistent)
Validity
  • Internal
  • Are you measuring what you think you are measuring?

  • External
  • Are the results generalisable
  • Temporal - over time
  • Population - to different groups
  • Ecological - to different settings
If an experiment is reliable it is unlikely to be valid

Slide 51 - Tekstslide

Internal validity
External validity
Population Validity
Temporal Validity
Ecological Validity

Are results valid across time
Are results valid among all populations
Are the results valid in other settings
Did we measure what we set out to
can we generalise the results

Slide 52 - Sleepvraag

Asch's study has
A
high reliability - high validity
B
high reliability - low validity
C
low reliability - high validity
D
low reliability - low validity

Slide 53 - Quizvraag

Asch - LAB STUDY
Strengths 
(objective, systematic, replicable)

High level of control
Manipulate the IV
Measure the effect on the DV
Establish Cause and Effect
Easy to Replicate
Establishes Reliability

Asch - LAB STUDY
Weaknesses

Low level of Validity
Tasks lack mundane realism so are low in Ecological Validity

Demand Characteristics affect the internal validity

Slide 54 - Tekstslide

Child of its time
Not much is known about group size
Population validity
Demand characteristics
Study of non conformity
Unconvincing confederates
There are significant cultural differences
most pople did not conform
it is assumed 3 is the magic number
may lack temporal validity

Slide 55 - Sleepvraag

timer
4:00

Slide 56 - Tekstslide

I don't understand
Child of its time
Demand characteristics and Mori and Arai
Population Validity
The issue of group size
Study of Non-Conformity

Slide 57 - Poll

Outline the procedure used by Asch in his study of conformity and the findings of this study. (6 marks)
Procedure
  • Asch tested 123 male US undergraduates, who were seated around a table with other ‘participants’ and shown three lines of different lengths. Their task was to say which of the three lines was the same length as a standard line. The participant always answered second to last, with the other ‘participants’ actually being confederates who were instructed to all give the same wrong answer on 12 of the 18 trials.
3 for procedure

Slide 58 - Tekstslide

Outline the procedure used by Asch in his study of conformity and the findings of this study. (6 marks)
Findings 
  • On the 12 ‘critical’ trials, participants conformed to the incorrect judgements given by the confederates approximately one-third of the time. There were individual differences inconformity rates, with one-quarter of the participants never conforming at all, and one in 20 conforming on all 12 critical trials. In a control condition, where participants made theirjudgements without the distraction of confederates giving wrong answers, they made mistakes only 1% of the time.
3 for findings

Slide 59 - Tekstslide

Explain the role of group size as a variable affecting conformity.
 (4 marks)
  • Asch found there was very little conformity when the majority consisted of just one or two confederates. When the number of confederates increased to three, the proportion of conforming responses also increased, up to about 30%. Further increases in the size of the majority did not significantly increase this level of conformity. 
3 - steep rise to 3 and then the effect plateued out

Slide 60 - Tekstslide

Explain the role of unanimity as a variable affecting conformity.
 (4 marks)
  • When the unanimity of the group was broken in Asch’s study, conformity levels decreased significantly. For example, if the participant was given the support of a confederate who gave the right answers throughout, conformity levels dropped from 33% to 5.5%. In another condition, where a confederate gave an answer that was a different wrong answer to the one given by the majority, conformity levels also decreased to 9%. Asch believed that it was breaking the group’s unanimous position that was the major factor in conformity reduction.
4

Slide 61 - Tekstslide

Explain the role of task difficulty as a variable affecting conformity. (4 marks)
  • When Asch made the task more difficult by making the differences between the line lengths much smaller, the level of conformity increased. Asch believed that situational differences (task difficulty) and individual differences (self-efficacy) are both important in determining conformity
2

Slide 62 - Tekstslide

Slide 63 - Tekstslide

0

Slide 64 - Video