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Summary Social Influence Outline (AQA)

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This document is a concise and comprehensive document designed to support AS / A Level Psychology students in understanding the complexities of social influence. Covering key concepts, influential factors, and notable experiments, these notes provide a solid foundation for grasping human behaviour in social settings. With clear explanations, visual aids, and real-world applications, this resource is an invaluable tool for studying and revising social influence theories.

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SOCIAL INFLUENCE

CONFORMITY

Definition: A type of social influence involving a change in behaviour in
order to fit in with a group

Change is a response to real/imagined pressure from a person or group

TYPES OF CONFORMITY

Compliance: group acceptance
 Going a long w majority in order to fit in, regardless of private
feelings
 Adjust/change public behaviour for approval
 Superficial, short-term change

Identification: group membership
 When a person identifies w, values or likes the group
 Changes in public behaviour + private beliefs- experience group
membership
 Change is not permanent + short term

Internalisation: real acceptance of group norms
 Group beliefs become part of own belief system
 Content of attitude is consistent w own value system
 Long-term change of public + private beliefs/behaviours


EXPLANATIONS FOR CONFORMITY

Normative social influence
 Need to be liked, following the crowd, social approval
 NSI occurs when a person goes along w majority to maintain group
harmony, to be accepted, gain social approval, avoid
disproval/rejection
 A person must believe they’re under surveillance of group- leads to
temporary change in opinions/behaviour


Informational social influence
 Need to be right, majority viewpoint likely to be right
 ISI associated w internalisation- change in behaviour + belief is
result of person adopting a new belief system as they believe their
new beliefs are right

Evaluation

,STRENGTH
Evidence to support NSI
 Asch (1951): many ppts conformed on an unambiguous line test
 Confirmed in interviews that they felt self-conscious + afraid of
disapproval
 When ppts wrote down their answer, conformity fell to 12.5%- no
group pressure
 Shows conformity is result of need for approval
 NSI is a valid explanation

STRENGTH
Real world application
 Schultz et al. (2008): were able to change behaviour of hotel
guests
 Printed messages suggesting that other guests were using fewer
towels
 Linkenbach + Perkins (2003): found teens that were told most
people their age didn’t smoke were less likely to
 People can be shaped by making them aware of social norms

LIMITATION
Cannot explain everyone’s behaviour in similar positions
 Some people care more about being liked
 nAffiliators- more affected by NSI
 McGee + Teevan (1967): found these students more likely to
conform on tasks than others
 Individual differences in way people conform

STRENGTH
Evidence to support
 Lucas et al (2006): asked students to answer easy + hard maths
questions
 Greater conformity when they were difficult- mainly people who
rated their maths as poor
 Valid explanation- people conform + look to others + assume they
know better

LIMITATION
Influence depends on task type
 Laughun (1999): people more likely to be influenced when
judgments had to be made about social reality
 No objective reality to check


VARIABLES AFFECTING CONFORMITY

Asch’s original conformity research

, Aim
 To investigate the extent to which social pressure from a majority
could affect a person to conform

Procedure
 Sample of 123 male American students
 Believed they were taking part in a vision test
 One naïve ppt with 6-8 confederates- always sat second to last
 Everyone took turns to say which line was most like the target line

Findings
 Real ppts conformed to incorrect answer 36.8% of the time
 75% conformed on at least one critical trial
 25% never conformed
 Less than 1% gave a wrong answer in the control group

Conclusion
 Asch interviewed ppts after
 Most said they knew the answer + went a long w the group to fit in
 Confirms ppts conformed due to NSI

ASCH’S VARIATIONS (1955)

Group size

Aim
 To determine how minority size affects conformity rate

Procedure
 Variations ranged from 1-15 confederates

Findings
 1 confederate: ppts conformed on 3% of trials
 2 confederates: 13% conformity
 3 confederates: 32% conformity
 At around 9 confederates conformity started decreasing- highest
level w just 3 confederates

Conclusion
 No need for a majority over 3
 People may suspect collision over 3/4

Unanimity

Aim
 To determine if a non-unanimous group influences conformity rates

Procedure + findings
 One confederate gave correct answer- rate dropped to 5.5%

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