AQA Psych Social Influence - Researchers and years - Statistics

General Stats
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  • The average score is 4 of 49
Answer Stats
Hint Answer % Correct
Conformity Baseline Line Study Asch 1951
100%
Conformity Variables Line Study Asch 1955
100%
Obedience: Situational Variables Milgram
100%
Resistance to Social Influence: Social Support: Obedience - Pp was joined by disobedient conf. - dropped from 65% to 10% Milgram
100%
Obedience: Authoritarian Personality Adorno 1950
0%
Resistance to Social Influence: Social Support Strength: research support - eight-week programme helping pregnant teens with stopping smoking - when had a buddy, less likely to pick up smoking Albrecht et al. 2006
0%
NSI Strength: Research Support - Pps said conformed as were afraid of disapproval (Pps wrote answers down = 12.5%) Asch 1951
0%
ISI Counterpoint: Unclear whether NSI or ISI is at work Asch 1955
0%
Resistance to Social Influence: Social Support: Conformity - conf. acts as model of independent behaviour Asch 1955
0%
Obedience: Legitimacy of Authority Strength: explains cultural differences - some cultures are more obedient than others - Australian women: 16% went to 450V. Germans: 85%. Australian Women - Kilham and Mann 1974 Germans - Mantell 1971
0%
Conformity to Social Roles Limitation: Lack of realism - play-acting Banuazizi and Mohavedi 1975
0%
Obedience Strength: Research support - replicated findings in reality TV show Beauvois et al. 2012
0%
Obedience: Situational Variables Strength: Research Support - NYC uniform variation Bickman 1974
0%
Conformity Limitation: Limited application - Collectivist cultures=higher conformity Bond and Smith 1966
0%
Obedience: Authoritarian Personality Limitation: Political bias - F-scale measures tendency towards extreme right-wing ideology Christie and Jahoda 1954
0%
Explanations for Conformity Deutsch and Gerard 1955
0%
Obedience: Authoritarian Personality Strength: Research Support - OG obedience study Pps took f-scale Elms and Milgram 1966
0%
Conformity Limitation: Artificial Situation - "Groups weren't very groupy" Fiske 2014
0%
Social Change Limitation: Research support for normative influences Counterpoint - Ppls behaviour isnt always changed through social norms - can they change students' alcohol usage? only small reduction in drinking quality, no effect on drinking frequency Foxcroft et al. 2015
0%
Conformity to Social Roles Limitation: Exaggeration of social roles - only 1/3 guards behaved cruelly Fromm 1973
0%
Resistance to Social Influence:Social Support Strength: research support - dissenting peers - oil company running a smear campaign - 29/33 Pps rebelled against orders Gamson et al. 1982
0%
Obedience Limitation: alternative explanation of findings - Pps only obeyed when identified with scientific aim of research (after prompts) Haslam et al. 2014
0%
Resistance to Social Influence: LOC Strength: Research support - LOC and resistance to obedience, repeated Milgram study, 37% internals didnt continue to highest, 23% externals didnt Holland 1967
0%
Types of Conformity Kelman 1958
0%
Conformity Strength: Research support - effects of task difficulty (math task) Lucas et al. 2006
0%
ISI Strength: Research support - Pps conformed often when math problems = difficult Lucas et al. 2006
0%
Social Change Limitation: Role of deeper processing may not play a role in how minorities bring social change - majority influence creates deeper processing if you don't share their views Mackie 1987
0%
Minority Influence Strength: Research support for deeper processing - message was presented, measured Pps' agreement - one group heard minority agree, other majority - then were exposed to a conflicting view, attitudes were measured again - less willing to change opinions if listened to minority, not majority Martin et al. 2003
0%
Conformity to Social Roles Strength: Lack of realism Counterpoint: 90% of prisoners convos = about prison life McDermott 2019
0%
NSI Limitation: Doesn't predict conformity in every case - nAffiliators (want to relate to other people) are most likely to conform McGhee and Teevan 1967
0%
Obedience: Situational Variables Strength: Cross-cultural replications - Dutch Pps giving stressful questions to conf. desperate for a job Meeus and Raaijmakers 1986
0%
Obedience: Agentic state Milgram 1961
0%
Obedience Milgram 1963
0%
Obedience: Agentic state Strength: Research support - "Who is responsible if L is harmed?" Milgram 1963
0%
Obedience: Agentic shift - occurs when person perceives someone else as an authority figure Milgram 1974
0%
Minority Influence Moscovici et al. 1969
0%
Social Change Strength: Minority influence explains change - social change is due to type of thinking that minorities inspire Nemeth 2009
0%
Conformity Limitation: Limited application - Women may be more conformist Neto 1995
0%
Social Change Strength: Research support for normative influences - can they change Pps' energy-use habits? one message = most residents want to reduce. control message = no mention of other people Nolan et al. 2008
0%
Obedience: Situational Variables Limitation: Low internal validity - Pps knew procedure was fake, were playing into demand characteristics Orne and Holland 1968
0%
Obedience Limitation: Low internal validity - Pps didn't believe in setup, only half believed shocks were real Orne and Holland 1968Perry 2013
0%
Obedience: Agentic state Limitation: Limited Explanation - 16/18 hospital nurses disobeyed authority figure (doctor) Rank and Jacobson 1977
0%
Obedience: Legitimacy of Authority Limitation: can't explain all disobedience - 16/18 nurses disobeyed authority figure Rank and Jacobson 1977
0%
Resistance to Social Influence: Locus of Control Rotter 1966
0%
Obedience Strength: Low internal validity Counterpoint - Puppy experiment, similar findings to Milgram's Sheridan and King 1972
0%
Obedience: Situational Variables Limitation: Cross-cultural replications Counterpoint - only 2 replications of findings in India and Jordan in 1968-1985 Smith and Bond 1998
0%
Resistance to Social Influence: LOC Limitation: evidence challenges LOC-resistance link - American LOC studies 1960-2002: higher resistance to obedience, higher external rates Twenge et al. 2004
0%
Minority Influence Strength: Research support for consistency - meta-analysis of 100 similar studies, found most consistent minorities = most influential Wood et al. 1994
0%
Conformity to Social Roles Zimbardo et al. 1973
0%
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