100% Zufriedenheitsgarantie Sofort verfügbar nach Zahlung Sowohl online als auch als PDF Du bist an nichts gebunden 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Essay

Social Influence A-level psychology AQA essay plans

Bewertung
-
Verkauft
-
seiten
13
Klasse
A+
Hochgeladen auf
06-10-2025
geschrieben in
2025/2026

- Detailed essay plans for the social influence topic - Clearly separates A01 and A03 - Outlines supporting and refuting evaluation points - Provides up-to-date statistics - Outlines psychologist's studies as evidence

Hochschule
Kurs











Ups! Dein Dokument kann gerade nicht geladen werden. Versuch es erneut oder kontaktiere den Support.

Schule, Studium & Fach

Studien-Niveau
Herausgeber
Fach
Kurs

Dokument Information

Hochgeladen auf
6. oktober 2025
Anzahl der Seiten
13
geschrieben in
2025/2026
Typ
Essay
Professor(en)
Unbekannt
Klasse
A+

Themen

Inhaltsvorschau

​Social Influence​




​ sychologist names =​​Red​
P
​Statistics =​​Purple​
​Examples =​​Green​
​Important terminology/ information =​​Orange​

,​Social Influence​

​Discuss explanations of conformity (16)​



​Discuss factors that can affect conformity. Refer to variations of Asch’s experiment in your answer. (16)​



​Outline and evaluate research into conformity to social roles, with reference to Zimbardo. (16)​


​Discuss research into obedience as investigated by Milgram (situational variables) (16)​



​Discuss agentic state and legitimacy of authority as a (situational) explanation of obedience (16)​



​Outline and evaluate the authoritarian personality as a dispositional explanation for obedience. (16)​



​Outline and evaluate two explanations of resistance to social influence. (16)​



​Outline and evaluate research into minority influence. (16)​



​Outline and evaluate the role of social influence processes in social change. (16)​

,​Discuss explanations of conformity (16)​

​A01​ ​ eutsch and Gerald​​developed a two-process theory,​​arguing that there are two main reasons people conform: the​
D
​need to be right (ISI) and the need to be liked (NSI)​

I​nformational​ -​ ​ ​ hen someone conforms because they want to be right​
W
​social influence​ ​-​ ​Look to others by copying or obeying them to have the right answer when a person is​
​(ISI)​ ​unsure​
-​ ​ ​Usually leads to internalisation as you truly believe that they have the right answer​
​-​ ​We do not have the knowledge to make our own decisions (ambiguous situation), the​
​idea of following who has the better/ expert knowledge​
​-​ ​e.g. You don't know the answer in class, if most of the class picks one answer, you​
​usually accept it. We follow the behaviour of the majority as we want to be right.​

​ ormative social​
N -​ ​ ​ hen someone conforms because they want to be liked​
W
​influence (NSI)​ ​-​ ​When a person needs to be accepted or have approval from a group​
​-​ ​Individuals follow the norms of the group as they don't like to appear foolish and​
​prefer social approval​
-​ ​ ​Emotional process as it's how we feel about ourselves​
​-​ ​Temporary change in opinions/ behaviour (compliance)​
​-​ ​e.g. laughing at an unfunny joke​

​A03​ S​ upport for NSI -​ ​-​ S​ ome of​​Asch's​​participants conformed because they​​felt self-conscious when giving​
​Asch​ ​answers and were afraid of disapproval.​
​-​ ​When participants wrote down their answers,​​conformity​​fell to 12.5% because there​
​was no normative pressure.​

I​ndividual​ ​-​ ​ oesn't predict conformity in every case; some people are concerned with being liked​
D
​differences in NSI​ ​by others​
​-​​McGhee and​ -​ ​ ​These are known as nAffiliators (they have a strong need relate to other people)​
​Tevanfound​ ​-​ ​nAffiliators are more likely to conform​​(McGhee and​​Tevan found this)​
​-​ ​NSI underlies conformity for some but not others; we cannot explain individual​
​differences in conformity by one general theory​

S​ upport for ISI -​ ​-​ L​ ucas​​found participants conformed more to incorrect​​answers when the​
​Lucas​ ​mathematical questions were difficult.​
-​ ​ ​When questions were easier, they knew their own minds​
​-​ ​When in a hard situation, they were uncertain, so they relied on the answers given by​
​others.​

I​nstead, we​ -​ ​ ​ sch​​found conformity is reduced when there is another​​dissenting participant,​
A
​should take an​ ​-​ ​They might reduce the power of NSI (because they provide social support), or they​
​interactionist​ ​may reduce the power of ISI (because they give an alternative source of information).​
​approach.​ -​ ​ ​Both interpretations are possible.​
​-​ ​This means that it may be more beneficial to look at NSI and ISI as complementary, as​
​opposed to mutually exclusive mechanisms.​

, ​Discuss factors that can affect conformity. Refer to variations of Asch’s experiment in your answer. (16)​

​A01​ ​-​ ​ sch​​wanted to measure the extent to which people​​would conform to the opinions of others, even in a task​
A
​that is obvious and clearly wrong.​
-​ ​ ​123 male American undergraduates​
​-​ ​Presented with 4 lines; 3 comparison lines and 1 standard line​
​-​ ​Asked to state which of the three lines was the same length as the standard line​
​-​ ​The real participant answered the last or penultimate​
​-​ ​Confederates would give the same incorrect answer for​​12 out of 18 trials, these are known as the critical​
​trials.​
​-​ ​Asch observed how the participant would give the same incorrect answer as the confederates versus the​
​correct answer, which was obviously the correct answer -​​75% conformed on at least one critical trial​

​ roup​
G -​ ​ ​ roup size: An individual is more likely to conform in a larger group​
G
​size​ ​-​ ​Rates of conformity with 2 confederates - 13%​
​-​ ​Rates of conformity with 3 confederates - 32%​
​-​ ​Above 3 confederates, conformity rates plateaued (it is a curvilinear relationship)​
​-​ ​Conformity doesn't increase in groups larger than four as it's the optimal group size.​
​-​ ​A person is more likely to conform if all members of the group are in agreement because their​
​confidence in the correctness of the group rises.​

​ nani​
U -​ ​ ​ n individual is more likely to conform when the group is unanimous.​
A
​mity​ ​-​ ​Asch​​introduced a dissenter, who ALWAYS disagreed​​with the majority.​
​-​ ​Conformity fell from 32% (ppts conformed on 32% of critical trials) to 5.5%​
​-​ ​Having a dissenter enables the naive participant to behave more independently; the participant​
​has more confidence that their answer is correct.​

T​ ask​ -​ ​ ​ sch​​altered the length of the lines, making them​​similar to one another.​
A
​difficu​ ​-​ ​Since it was harder to judge the correct answer, conformity increased.​
​lty​ ​-​ ​When a task is difficult, we are more uncertain of the answer, so we look to others' confirmation.​
​-​ ​Suggesting that informational social influence is a major mechanism for conformity​

​A03​ S​ upport of​​Asch’s​ ​-​ L​ ucas​​found that individuals were more likely to conform​​to the wrong answers of​
​study -​​Lucas​ ​previous participants when the mathematical questions were more difficult.​
​-​ ​Asch​​also argued this but this may be too simplistic,​​and it might have been confidence​
​(a personal factor, not situational).​

L​ acks temporal​ ​-​ ​ errin and Spencer​​criticised the study as the time​​period the study was conducted had​
P
​validity -​​Perrin​ ​influenced the results because during the time period.​
​and Spencer​ -​ ​ ​The USA was very conservative and involved in anti-communist hunts​​(McCarthyism)​​.​
​-​ ​Thus, people were less likely to behave independently because they were worried​
​about the consequences.​
​-​ ​Nowadays, individuals may not feel as obliged to conform; the experiment may not be​
​applicable to the modern day. Thus, the study can be said to lack temporal validity.​

​Artificial situation​ ​-​ T​ he ecological validity of the study can be questioned as the participants knew they​
​were in a research situation. Demand characteristics may be displayed.​
​-​ ​Additionally, the task was trivial and had no relation to real life, thus mundane realism.​

​ ulture bound -​
C -​ ​ ​ eto​​suggested that women may be more conformist than​​males​
N
​Neto​ ​-​ ​Also, collectivist cultures​​(e.g. China)​​have found​​higher rates of conformity compared​
​to individualistic cultures such as the USA.​
​-​ ​Asch's​​findings cannot be applied to all cultures.​
4,71 €
Vollständigen Zugriff auf das Dokument erhalten:

100% Zufriedenheitsgarantie
Sofort verfügbar nach Zahlung
Sowohl online als auch als PDF
Du bist an nichts gebunden

Lerne den Verkäufer kennen
Seller avatar
Studypsychsocio
4,7
(3)

Ebenfalls erhältlich im paket-deal

Lerne den Verkäufer kennen

Seller avatar
Studypsychsocio Exeter University
Folgen Sie müssen sich einloggen, um Studenten oder Kursen zu folgen.
Verkauft
2
Mitglied seit
1 Jahren
Anzahl der Follower
0
Dokumente
12
Zuletzt verkauft
1 Jahren vor
Studypsychsocio

Selling A* grade revision resources for A-level Psychology & Sociology

4,7

3 rezensionen

5
2
4
1
3
0
2
0
1
0

Kürzlich von dir angesehen.

Warum sich Studierende für Stuvia entscheiden

on Mitstudent*innen erstellt, durch Bewertungen verifiziert

Geschrieben von Student*innen, die bestanden haben und bewertet von anderen, die diese Studiendokumente verwendet haben.

Nicht zufrieden? Wähle ein anderes Dokument

Kein Problem! Du kannst direkt ein anderes Dokument wählen, das besser zu dem passt, was du suchst.

Bezahle wie du möchtest, fange sofort an zu lernen

Kein Abonnement, keine Verpflichtungen. Bezahle wie gewohnt per Kreditkarte oder Sofort und lade dein PDF-Dokument sofort herunter.

Student with book image

“Gekauft, heruntergeladen und bestanden. So einfach kann es sein.”

Alisha Student

Häufig gestellte Fragen