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Title: SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY UNIT 1 Tajfel et al. (1971) Social


1
AS EDEXCEL PSYCHOLOGY 2008
  • SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY UNIT 1

2
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY Definition key social
psychological terms
  • How other people, groups, culture society can
    influence our behaviour. Individuals with
    perceived authority or charisma can influence us,
    e.g., obedience, self-fulfilling prophecy groups
    can influence behaviour, e.g., compliance
    conformity Asch, Latane Darley (Smoke filled
    room), crowd behaviour diffusion of
    responsibility.
  • Culture society can influence us our culture
    can affect our response to individuals groups,
    who we believe has legitimate authority over us
    and may also affect our general tendency for
    obedience (we may have an ethnocentric bias).
    Culture society may influence our beliefs about
    perceived attractiveness rates of anorexia may
    reflect social cultural influences.
  • The power of the social situation can be very
    influential even good people will do evil
    things if they are in an evil situation

3
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY Key Terms
  • Agentic state we surrender our free will
    conscience to serve the interests of the wider
    group we see ourselves as primarily the agents
    of those with power and in authority and only
    secondarily as individuals responsibility
    shifts to those in charge and we become
    de-individuated, denying personal responsibility
  • Autonomous state essentially the opposite we
    feel free to act as we wish, including how our
    conscience dictates.
  • Moral strain this is the result of having to do
    something we believe to be immoral in order to
    function as an agent of those with power
    authority, and so benefit society. Denial (a
    defence mechanism) is often used to avoid the
    distress associated with moral strain and having
    to do things we might normally find abhorrent.
  • In-groups/out-groups in-group loyalty refers to
    our tendency to identify ourselves as part of a
    particular group group to classify others as
    either within or outside that group thinking of
    ourselves as belonging to one or more groups is
    regarded as a fundamental feature of human
    nature. We tend to judge people not in our
    particular in-group more harshly than those we
    identify with, I.e., people are either us or
    them in-group loyalty V out-group hostility.

4
Key Terms (continued)
  • Social categorisation categorising ourselves as
    members of a particular group these categories
    are ones we learn to be important, e.g., Goths,
    Emos.
  • Social identification Adopting the identity of
    the group to which we have categorised ourselves,
    adopting consistent behaviours with this
    categorisation, adopting the attitudes
    behaviours of the in-group to distinguish oneself
    from non-members.
  • Social comparison comparing your group
    favourably to others we need to compare
    ourselves our in-group favourably to others to
    maintain our self-esteem. In out-groups are
    measured against each other, the out-group is
    devalued and the self-esteem of the in-group
    members is thus raised.

5
In depth area of study Obedience Prejudice
6
OBEDIENCE
  • Obedience to allow ourselves to be directed by
    an individuals who we perceive to have
    power/authority over us. It differs from
    compliance, which means simply going along with
    suggestions or instructions without being
    directly ordered to and conformity which is
    where we adopt the attitudes behaviour of those
    around us without being directly ordered to by an
    authority figure.
  • Studies of obedience, why people carry out orders
    which they seemingly find abhorrent and go
    against their moral believes and values, gained
    impetus after the destructive obedience
    demonstrated by some Nazis during World War II,
    such as the Holocaust.
  • Genocide, as illustrated by the Holocaust, is the
    most obvious example of destructive obedience
    other examples of destructive obedience include
    genocide in Rwanda, Iraq and the former
    Yugoslavia, the Mi Lai massacre and human rights
    abuses in the US run military prison in Iraq
    Abu Ghraib.

7
Milgrams classic study of obedience (1963)
  • Name Milgrams study of obedience
  • Aim to investigate how obedient people would be
    in a situation where following orders would mean
    breaking participants moral codes harming
    another person to test the hypothesis that the
    Germans were different.
  • Method procedure-Milgram advertised for 40
    volunteers (males aged 20-50) to take part in a
    study on human memory (really obedience). Each
    participant was introduced individually to Mr
    Wallace (a confederate) and told that either
    they, or Mr Wallace would be randomly allocated
    the roles of either teacher or learner. Mr
    Wallace was always the leaner who would receive
    an electric shock every time he got a memory
    question wrong (Mr. Wallace was in another room
    so could be heard but not seen). The teacher
    (the naïve/real participant) was given a small
    shock at the beginning of the experiment to
    illustrate its effects. Shocks went up in 15v
    increments up to 450v marked XXX. The
    researcher Mr Wallace followed a carefully
    scripted set of responses prompts.
  • Generalisability can we generalise from
    Milgrams sample to the wider population, I.e.,
    is there population validity? Despite the fact
    that only US males were used, they were from a
    wide range of backgrounds ages furthermore,
    Milgram found very similar results with female
    participants and cross-cultural results tend to
    be similar (see table below).
  • Reliability a standardised procedure was
    followed, I.e., the same script verbal prompts
    were used for each participant.
  • Application to real life there are numerous
    examples in real life where we have to obey
    authority figures.
  • Validity did the study have experimental
    validity? Did the participants really believe
    they were giving electric shocks? Milgram did
    his best to convince the naïve participants of
    the veracity of his research he staged a sample
    45v shock for the naïve participant, the
    equipment looked real and the cries of Mr Wallace
    seemed genuine. Ecological validity do the
    results tell us anything about real-world
    behaviour? Would the participants really behave
    as they did in the real world and not in a
    laboratory situation?

8
Milgrams study (continued)
  • Results Before the research Milgram asked
    psychologists psychiatrists to estimate what
    of naïve participants would inflict shocks the
    estimate was les than 1. In reality 100 went
    to 300v 65 went to 450v. NB. Obedience is
    operationalised as going to 450v.
  • Conclusion Milgram concluded that the power of
    the social situation is a powerful determinant of
    behaviour we are socialised from an early age
    to recognise authority and obey those with
    perceived power.
  • Validity contd Variations of Milgrams
    experiment, e.g., when done outside a lab and in
    a run down office block, saw obedience levels
    fall, but where still very high at 48.
    Hoflings (1966) field experiment found similar
    results and later real life incidents, e.g., Mai
    Lai, support the ecological validity of Milgrams
    study. Sheridan King (1972) conducted a
    procedural similar studies to Milgrams on
    puppies, participants thought they were shocking
    puppies similar results were obtained.
  • Ethics Participants were deceived but that was
    necessary to ensure experimental validity, but
    this meant they could not give informed consent.
    However, participants were fully debriefed at the
    end 84 said they were glad or very glad they
    had taken part, only 2 said they were sorry to
    have taken part 74 claimed to have learned
    something of personal importance. Withdrawal was
    made difficult, but in real life situations it is
    often not easy to disobey follow your
    conscience, so it was important to make
    withdrawal hard to simulate real life.

9
Milgrams study (continued)
  • Ethics contd Participants were put under a
    great deal of stress and caused much distress,
    but they did not have to administer the shocks
    and could, in reality, withdraw whenever they
    wanted. Moreover, Milgram consulted experts
    before the research no one predicted the level
    of obedience obtained. Finally, the wider
    benefits to society might be considered to
    outweigh the costs to the individual
    participants a cost-benefit analysis.

10
Variations of Milgrams original study
  • Prestige the experiment was moved from Yale
    university to a rundown office block obedience
    levels dropped to 47.5.
  • Responsibility when the participant was not
    directly responsible for the shocks, I.e., they
    simply had to read the paired words someone
    pressed the electric shock button, obedience rose
    to 92.5. When the teacher (naïve participant)
    had to hold the learners hand on the electric
    shock plate obedience dropped to 30.
  • Buffer if the learner teacher were
    together in the same room so that the teacher
    could be seen heard, obedience dropped to 40.
    When the learner could not be seen or heard,
    all the participants went to 450v.
  • Personal control when participants were allowed
    to choose their own shock level they always
    choose the lowest.
  • Witnessing disobedience where a participant saw
    another participant refuse to beyond
    administering 150v, only 10 then obeyed the
    experimental instructions carried on to 450v.
  • NB., these variations in the social situation,
    and their impact on the levels of obedience,
    illustrate how powerful the social situation is
    in determining human behaviour.
  • NB., the evaluative points applied to Milgrams
    original study basically apply to the variations.

11
Ethical issues the study of obedience
  • Studies of obedience often involve deception,
    preventing participants giving informed consent,
    but this is often necessary to ensure
    experimental validity.
  • Participants may experience significant distress,
    not least because they may find out quite
    negative things about themselves, I.e., they are
    prepared to obey cause harm to others.
  • Withdrawal is sometimes made difficult to
    simulate the effects of obedience in real life
    situations but participants can be fully
    debriefed afterwards.
  • The benefits of the research to wider society may
    outweigh the psychological emotional costs to
    the participants, i.e., finding out why even good
    people do horrible things in order to understand
    why atrocities are committed prevent them from
    happening in the future.

12
Milgrams agency theory
  • Milgram argued that general tendency to obey
    those we perceive to have authority is a
    mechanism to ensure a stable society. To run
    smoothly, complex societies require us to obey a
    vast range of social rules keeping to these
    rules means that we have to give up a certain
    amount of our free will.
  • To enable us to give up a degree of our free will
    we have evolved 2 states autonomous agentic
    (see the definitions of these terms above).
  • We are socialised from an early age into
    developing the capacity for the agentic state.
    This process starts in the home, continues in
    school and into the workplace to maintain order
    in different social situations we give up our
    free will and obey parents, teachers employers
    (people often put the needs of their employers
    above their own, e.g., they work longer than
    their contracted hours, take work home, sacrifice
    family quality of life for their jobs).
  • We use this agentic state to avoid moral strain
    when we do things against our conscience we
    believe we have little choice as we are acting as
    agents of authority figures.

13
Evaluation of agency theory
  • It has face validity (on the surface it seems to
    explain human behaviour in many situations,
    school, the workplace, armed forces etc.)
  • There is a lot of experimental support for it,
    e.g., the studies of Milgram Hofling.
  • A study by Blass (1996), where participants saw
    extracts from the original Milgram study, showed
    that these participants blamed the researcher for
    what the naïve participants did, i.e., they
    accepted that these naïve participants were the
    agents of the authority figure, in this case, the
    researcher.
  • A study by Bushman (1988) varied the
    authoritativeness of the authority figure, when
    the authority figure had more authority/status
    (e.g., a uniform) obedience was more likely. We
    are more likely to become agents when perceived
    level of authority increases.
  • When participants are reminded of their potential
    for autonomy, e.g., they see someone else
    disobey, obedience levels drop.
  • Not everyone in the Milgram study gave up their
    autonomy and entered into the agentic state this
    theory cannot explain individual differences in
    levels of obedience (see authoritarian
    personality to explain personality differences in
    obedience).

14
Evaluation of agency theory (continued)
  • The obedience alibi David Mandel argues that
    agency theory lets people off the hook for
    their heinous actions, I.e., it gives
    concentration camp guards an excuse for their
    deplorable behaviour I cannot be held
    personally responsible for my actions, I was only
    obeying orders. This might have some validity
    in some cases but should be treated with caution.
  • Circular argument it cannot be defined
    independently from obedience people obey
    because they are in an agentic state, but are in
    an agentic because they obey. Circular arguments
    have limited explanatory value because you
    simply go around in circles!
  • Personality (charisma) it doesnt take into
    account personality variables obedience, some
    people might be naturally more predisposed to
    obey, whilst some people can get others to obey
    them even when they have little or no authority
    over them, it is simply the force of their
    personality (charisma) which elicits obedience.
  • There are other explanations of obedience, e.g.,
    French Raven (1959) Social Power theory. This
    theory states that different people in different
    social situations have different types of social
    power Reward, punishment (coercive), legitimate,
    expert charismatic power. Milgrams researcher
    had some of these types of power.

15
Cross-cultural studies of obedience
  • Studies of obedience carried out across cultures
    find similarly high levels of obedience to those
    found by Milgram. This shows that we are, by
    nature, social beings, heavily influenced by our
    social environment setting the power of the
    social situation.
  • However, cross-cultural studies of obedience
    often use different methodologies, so like is not
    always being compared with like.
  • In an Australian study, Kilham Mann (1974), the
    learners had long hair may have been
    perceived as more or less deserving of electric
    shocks as a result. Also, in this study female
    students were asked to shock another female (in
    Milgram, the learner being shocked was always
    male).
  • Hamilton Sanders (1995) presented participants
    from US, Japan Russia with scenarios where a
    crime was either an individuals idea or the
    order of a superior. Little responsibility was
    attributed to the person who acted criminally
    under orders, but that reversed when they acted
    on their own volition. However, cultural
    differences emerged US participants attributed
    more personal responsibility to individuals
    acting criminally under orders than did the
    Japanese Russian ones thus obedience might be
    deduced to be more important in Japanese
    Russian culture than US culture, I.e., obeying
    even criminally wrong orders might be seen as
    appropriate more in Japan Russia than in US.
  • Finally, most obedience research involve studies
    that were conducted in western industrialised
    nations, so universal conclusions about human
    nature cannot necessarily be drawn (see table
    below).

16
Cross-cultural replications of Milgrams
obedience research
17
Meeus Raaijmakers (1985) Administrative
Obedience carrying out orders to use
psychological-administrative violence
  • Name Meeus Raaijmakers (1985)
  • Aim To test the concepts of obedience
    illustrated by Milgram by in a more up-to-date
    way in a culture more liberal than 1960s US
    1980s Holland. Would obedience still be high if
    psychological, as opposed to physical, harm was
    to be applied?
  • Method 24 naïve participants took part in what
    they thought was a job interview that required
    the applicant being able to tolerate stress. In
    1 condition an experimenter sat in with the naïve
    participant who was to interview the applicant (a
    confederate or stooge, much like Mr. Wallace in
    the Milgram study). The naïve participant was
    told to cause the applicant stress being making a
    series of graduated cutting comments to the
    applicant, with 1 being the most innocuous
    least offensive to 15 being the most offensive.
  • Generalisability adults from the general
    population, not just students, so is therefore
    more representative and so generalisable, and the
    results are consistent with other studies done in
    Europe, so arguably there is good population
    validity.
  • Reliability well-controlled, standardised
    statements, I.e., from 1-15 generating
    quantitative data which can be objectively
    easily analysed interpreted. The study
    supports the findings of Milgram Hofling the
    high levels of obedience found in this study can
    be explained by the non-physical nature of the
    abuse required to be obedient.
  • Application to real life psychological abuse is
    far more common in the real world than physical
    abuse, especially in the workplace.

18
Meeus Raaijmakers (continued)
  • Validity researchers maintained that ecological
    validity was high, arguing that the type of abuse
    depicted in the study was more common in society
    than the physical abuse depicted in Milgrams
    study and therefore more realistic. However,
    experimental validity was still quite low because
    the scenario is still quite extreme and bizarre.
  • Ethics although the level of distress
    experienced by the naïve participants might be
    less than in Mlgrams study, not giving electric
    shocks so no physical harm was thought to being
    perpetrated, it might still be distressing for
    the participants because they are seemingly
    causing mental stress to another person. The
    experiment also required a high level of
    deception to work. There was no lie about the
    reality of the shocks as in the Milgram study
    so consent was more informed however, deception
    was still used, the interviewee was an actor, but
    deception necessary for experimental validity.
  • 1 your answer to question 9 was wrong
    15according to the test it would be better for
    you to apply for lower functions. The applicant
    would show increasing levels of distress as the
    offensive comments progressed up the scale to 15.
  • Results In the experimental condition, where the
    experimenter sat in on the interview, 22/24 (92)
    of participants made all 15 stressful comments.
    In the control condition, where the naïve
    participant was alone, none did. Rates of
    obedience were higher than in the Milgram study.
  • Conclusion Even in a liberal culture like the
    Netherlands, people obeyed an authority figure
    were prepared to abuse a stranger
    psychologically. People are even more willing to
    abuse people emotionally under direct orders.

19
In depth area of study prejudice
discrimination
20
Prejudiced Attitudes
21
PREJUDICE Social Identity Theory (minimal groups)
  • Social identity theory states that simply being
    in a group, or perceiving that you are in a
    group, is enough to create in-group loyalty
    out-group hostility.
  • Social identity theory the process of
    generating in-group loyalty out-group hostility
    is made of 3 features
  • SOCIAL CATEGORISATION
  • SOCIAL IDENTIFICATION
  • SOCIAL COMPARISON
  • (SEE DEFINITIONS OF THESE TERMS ABOVE)

22
Social Identity Theory (continued)
  • Social identity theory is illustrated by the
    research carried out by Tajfel (1970).
  • Participants were placed in groups according to
    minimal criteria whether or not they liked the
    same paintings, or, when estimating the number of
    dots on a screen, they were under or
    over-estimators. In reality the participants
    were allocated to groups entirely randomly.
  • A member of each group was then given the same
    task to perform.
  • Members of each group then had to allocate
    rewards to the people performing the simple task.
  • Despite the fact that the task being performed
    was the same for the individuals from each group,
    both groups decided to reward the member of their
    own group more highly than the member of the
    other group.
  • There was no direct competition between the 2
    groups and what members of each group thought
    they had in common with each other was minimal,
    i.e., liking the same painting, or being an
    under/over-estimator.
  • Nevertheless, members of both groups were
    prepared to discriminate in favour of the member
    of their particular group presumably because
    this increased their own social
    standing/self-esteem by the process of social
    comparison.

23
Evaluation of Social Identity Theory
  • The theory has a certain amount of face validity
    as it can successfully explain many aspects of
    real-world behaviour be applied to a wide range
    of social situations, e.g., football teams,
    racism, Emos/Goths.
  • There is great deal of empirical, scientific
    research which supports the theory, e.g., the
    research carried out by Tajfel, to an extent
    Sherif (1961), as the boys immediately developed
    strong in-group loyalty out-group hostility
    when they knew there was another group of boys in
    the woods.
  • The theory has useful applications because it
    can explain how prejudice discriminate
    originate, it can also be used to reduce
    prejudice discrimination, i.e., by preventing
    in-groups from forming, mixing up social groups,
    trying to prevent social categorisation
    identification.

24
Evaluation of Social Identity Theory(continued)
  • Some contemporary research into minimal groups
    suggests discrimination prejudice is more
    complex. E.g., Dobbs Crano (2001) showed that
    where individuals perceived that their in-group
    was in the majority there was much less in-group
    favouritism out-group hostility than when they
    perceived their in-group was in the minority,
    (then the situation reversed) I.e., more likely
    to be anti-English if you are Welsh or Scottish
    than the other way around, because Welsh
    Scottish people are the minority in the UK.
  • Social Identity Theory cannot explain individual
    differences in levels of in-group loyalty
    out-group hostility not everyone in a particular
    in-group will have the same level of loyalty
    towards the in-group hostility towards the out
    group (authoritarian personality theory may
    explain individual differences in prejudice
    better).
  • Finally, people may have all sorts of complex
    reasons for identifying with each other, not just
    minimal reasons based on social
    standing/self-esteem, e.g., shared cultural
    history, shared histories of conflict battles
    for resources.

25
2 studies in detail from social psychology
26
Hofling et al. (1966) Experimental study in
nurse-physician relationships
  • Name Hofling et al. obedience in a natural
    setting
  • Aim To investigate nurse-physician
    relationships, I.e., investigate effects of
    authority on obedience in a natural environment
    (a hospital)
  • Method field experiment 12 graduate nurses 21
    student nurses asked to fill in a questionnaire
    about how they would act in the experimental
    situation. 22 nurses from 2 separate hospitals
    took part in experimental condition. While alone
    on a ward they were asked by an unknown doctor
    over the phone to break 4 hospital rules.
  • Generalisability although the study only
    involved nurses, and nurses might conceivably be
    more inclined to obey doctors, the nurses in the
    study were simply those on duty at time, not
    specifically chosen. Also, nurses are not a
    particularly unique set of people, therefore, the
    study might be considered fairly good in terms of
    population validity.
  • Reliability the study was run 22 times with
    similar results, and the procedure was
    standardised. However, a field experiment has
    limited control over extraneous variables, so
    reducing reliability, I.e., the nurses might have
    been very tired, or overworked that particular
    day, so reacted unusually without thinking,
    I.e., not how they would normally react, but
    Hofling did have an observer on the ward to
    ensure that conditions were right for the
    experiment to proceed.

27
Hofling et al. (continued)
  • Method contd 1 Give an over dose of a drug
    Astroten 5mgto a patient (it was really a
    placebo). 2. Instructions were given over the
    phone, not in person. 3. The particular drug
    was unauthorised for use on that specific ward.
    4. The instruction was given by an unfamiliar
    voice. The doctor used a written script to
    standardise the procedure all conversations
    were recorded. Results were operationalised
    thus nurse complies goes to give drug
    consistently refuses to give drug goes to get
    advice becomes upset call lasts longer than 10
    minutes.
  • Application to real life this was done a in a
    real world environment and the negative effects
    of nurses obeying inappropriate instructions from
    doctors is very real important.
  • Validity the study has very good ecological
    validity because it was done a real hospital with
    nurses who were unaware they were taking part in
    a study it demonstrated real behaviour nb.,
    the difference between the questionnaire results
    7 actual behavioural results. It also has
    experimental validity as the nurses were not
    aware they were in an experiment so behaved
    naturally, there were no demand characteristics
    so experimental validity was high, participant
    behaviour was not for the benefit of the study or
    the researcher.

28
Hofling et al. (continued)
  • Results results of questionnaire10/12 graduate
    nurses 21/21 student nurses believed no one
    would give medication. Results of experimental
    condition21/22 started to give the medication,
    calls were brief, only 11 nurses were aware of
    dosage limits for drug Astroten, none were
    hostile towards the caller all admitted knowing
    what they were doing was against hospital rules
    but said it was a fairly common practice.
  • Conclusion the perception of authority (in this
    case a doctor) is enough to generate obedience,
    even when this could possibly endanger a
    patients life.
  • Ethics ethically the study was very dubious. No
    informed consent was obtained and the nurses were
    deceived. This was necessary for the
    experimental validity of the study to avoid
    demand characteristics but would be upsetting for
    the nurses. Although the nurses were fully
    debriefed, to offset the deception, they admitted
    to feeling shame, guilt embarrassment at their
    professional behaviour research should ideally
    leave participants feeling positive about
    themselves, or they should leave in the same
    emotional state as they entered it. However, the
    nurses were reassured that they had acted
    normally, patient care had not been affected
    they were not criticised for their conduct.

29
Sherif et al. (1961) Intergroup conflict
co-operation The Robbers Cave experiment
  • Name Sherif et al. (1961).
  • Aim To see if prejudice can be created between
    two very similar groups by putting them in
    competition with each other.
  • Method A field experiment 22 12 year old white,
    lower middle-class protestant boys were taken to
    a summer camp in Robbers Cave national park,
    Oaklahoma. They were all very similar
    psychologically well-adjusted. They were put
    into 2 separate groups for first 5 days each
    group given tasks to perform to help them bond as
    a group given names (Rattlers Eagles). Over
    next 4 days tension was generated between the 2
    groups by staging a series of competitions
    between the 2 groups.
  • Generalisability The sample was not very
    representative, i.e., all white, protestant,
    middle class young boys lacked population
    validity.
  • Reliability although the boys were all tested to
    ensure they were psychologically well-adjusted
    and they were all similar backgrounds, in a field
    experiment such as this it is very hard to
    control confounding extraneous variables.
  • Application to real life There are many examples
    of tension conflict over resources leading to
    prejudice discrimination, e.g., Northern
    Ireland, race riots in northern England, Israel
    Palestine. Also, how to reduce prejudice, e.g.,
    through 2 opposing groups working together to
    solve a common problem called a superordinate
    goal.

30
Sherif et al. (1961) Intergroup conflict
co-operation The Robbers Cave experiment
  • Method contd Once hostility had been created
    the researchers tried to reduce it by bringing
    both groups together for joint activities and
    problem-solving tasks.
  • Results A strong in-group preference out-group
    hostility was shown by each group this was
    eventually reduced by the joint problem-solving
    tasks.
  • Conclusion Competition increased prejudice
    discrimination, leading to clear inter-group
    conflict however, there was some hostility
    between the groups as soon as they were aware of
    each other. Working together on co-operative
    tasks successfully, but not entirely, reduced
    prejudice discrimination between the 2 groups.
  • Validity Ecological validity was high because
    they experiment was conducted in a natural
    environment, therefore, eliciting natural,
    uncontrived behaviour also there was high
    experimental validity as the boys did not realise
    their behaviour was being observed that they
    were in a experiment, so there would be no demand
    characteristics (trying to please the
    researcher). However, even before competition
    started, as soon as the groups knew of the
    existence of another group there was out-group
    hostility simply being in a group seemed to be
    enough to create this, there was no need for
    competition. The competition simply strengthened
    that hostility.
  • Ethics the boys were not harmed or distressed,
    physical hostility was prevented the
    researchers endeavoured to reduce the
    discrimination prejudice at the end.

31
Sherif et al. (1961) Intergroup conflict
co-operation The Robbers Cave experiment
  • Ethics contd Nevertheless, the did set out to
    deliberate create something negative prejudice
    discrimination, but do the benefits of the
    research outweigh the costs to the participants?

32
Tajfel et al. (1971) Social Categorisation
Intergroup Behaviour
  • Generalisability The research has been
    replicated on many different social groups, not
    just schoolboys, as in the original studies, e.g.
    adults in Cardiff, female adults in California,
    soldiers in Germany all showed similar minimal
    group effects. Therefore, this research does
    have population validity.
  • Reliability The study was easy to replicate
    because the procedure was strictly controlled
    very similar results have been obtained across
    different cultures groups.
  • Application to real life In the real world we
    are very often allocated to groups based on
    minimal criteria, e.g., school, workplace. Can
    be used to reduce prejudice, e.g., merging
    in-groups out-groups.
  • Name Tajfel et al. (1971)
  • Aim To test whether the act of placing people
    into 2 clearly identifiable groups, based on
    minimal intra-group similarities not in
    competition, would be enough to produce prejudice
    between groups of very similar people. (NB.,
    interbetween/intrawithin)
  • Method See explanation of Social Identity theory
    above. 2 versions of experiment, 1 involving
    paintings by Klee or Kandinsky, and 1 involving
    estimating numbers on a screen (being an under or
    over-estimator). The participants were initially
    placed into groups according to whether they were
    under/over-estimators, or their painting
    preference (in reality the allocation to groups
    was entirely random).

33
Tajfel et al. (1971) Social Categorisation
Intergroup Behaviour (continued)
  • Method contd Participants were then given the
    opportunity to allocate points, which could be
    converted into prizes, to members of the two
    groups. The participants did not know who they
    were allocating points to, but did know which
    group they belonged to. In another variation,
    Tajfel further manipulated the experiment by
    ensuring that when participants favoured members
    of their in-group, the out-group would
    automatically get more points.
  • Results The participants overwhelmingly chose to
    favour their own group by allocating more points
    to members of their own group, even when this
    meant the out-group would then get more overall
    points, therefore prizes.
  • Validity The study lacked ecological validity
    because it was quite removed from the real life
    experiences of the participants, I.e., being
    asked to estimate dots on a screen, or be placed
    in a group according to painting preference.
    Furthermore, the study was carried out in a
    university setting which would be unfamiliar to
    many of the participants. Experimental validity
    may be questioned because arguably there was
    implied competition created by the forced nature
    of the choice participants had to make between
    members of their in-group or those of the
    out-group.

34
Tajfel et al. (1971) Social Categorisation
Intergroup Behaviour (continued)
  • Conclusion Even when categorised into
    meaningless/minimal groups, participants still
    chose to favour members of their own group over
    members of the other group. This shows we have a
    natural tendency in social situations to favour
    people we have identified defined as being part
    of our group discriminate against those
    perceived to be members of a different group.
    One explanation of this is that by favouring
    members of our own perceived in-group, we boost
    our own self-esteem, because we are part of that
    group.
  • Ethics There are no real ethical issues and the
    participants were not caused distress. As some
    of the participants were schoolboys, informed
    consent withdrawal may have been issue the boys
    had felt intimated by the adult researchers
    university setting. The research does provide
    very useful insight into the mechanics of
    prejudice discrimination and, therefore, ways
    of reducing prejudice discrimination.

35
1 key issue in Social Psychology
36
Key issues in Social Psychology destructive
obedience, cult behaviour, football/race related
violence
  • All the above issues can be explained using
    ideas, concepts research from social psychology
  • But how?
  • What ideas research can be used?
  • Agency theory
  • Agentic V. autonomous states
  • Moral strain
  • Charismatic leadership reward/punishment
    (coercive power)
  • Social Identity Theory in-group
    loyalty/out-group hostility
  • Social categorisation, identification, comparison
  • Self-esteem
  • Soldiers who commit war crimes, football crowd
    violence cult behaviour can be explained by
  • Agency theory, they become the agents of those
    with perceived authority/status/power thus
    losing their own autonomy. Moral strain is the
    result, denying personal responsibility is a
    coping mechanism.
  • Some people may have charismatic, or reward, or
    coercive, or expert power which gives them an
    ability to get others to do what they want them
    to. They may have a combination of these types
    of social power, thus eliciting obedience.

37
Key issues in Social Psychology destructive
obedience, cult behaviour, football/race related
violence
  • Being in the army, or a cult, or member of a
    football gang, or ethnic minority group can
    generate a strong sense of in-group loyalty
    out-group hostility.
  • A strong sense of in-group loyalty is often
    fostered by the army, cults etc., and the
    processes of social categorisation,
    identification comparison can increase
    self-esteem.
  • Any challenge to the in-group is also a challenge
    to members self-esteem and can be strongly
    resented.
  • However, the level of in-group loyalty
    out-group hostility varies between individual
    members of a group whether the out-group is
    perceived as being in the majority or minority.
  • All the above issues can be explained using
    ideas, concepts research from social psychology
  • But how?
  • What ideas research can be used?
  • Agency theory
  • Agentic V. autonomous states
  • Moral strain
  • Charismatic leadership reward/punishment
    (coercive power) simplistic, emotional language
  • Social Identity Theory in-group
    loyalty/out-group hostility
  • Social categorisation, identification, comparison
  • Self-esteem
  • De-individuation (Zimbardo-guards)
  • De-humanisation(Zimbardo-prisoners, Milgram)
  • Emotional contagion
  • Conformity/obedience/power of social situation.

38
Key issues in Social Psychology destructive
obedience, cult behaviour, football/race related
violence (continued)
  • Not everyone becomes an agent of perceived
    authority enters into an agentic state some
    people disobey despite the social, sometimes
    physical, costs to themselves. Agency theory
    struggles to explain this
  • The concept of agency theory may provide an
    excuse for some people to commit horrible acts
    atrocities they were psychologically powerless
    to act any differently, but is this really case?
  • Some conflict between groups is about competition
    for resources (Realistic Conflict Theory) or is
    the result of negative propaganda about
    out-groups so is not a naturally occurring
    social phenomena.

39
Research Methods/How Science Works Practical
  • For the social approach you will need to know a
    range of scientific terminology be able to
    describe evaluate a number of different social
    psychological research methods
  • Many of these terms you will need to apply to a
    short practical based on principles from social
    psychology.
  • When carrying out your own social psychology
    practical you will need to keep a record of

40
Research Methods/How Science Works Practical
  • How you planned it
  • How you carried it out/methodology procedure
  • How you analysed it
  • Your conclusions
  • Your evaluation of your practical.

41
Research Methods/How Science Works Practical
  • Qualitative data descriptive, non-numerical
    information, such as generated by open-ended
    questions, unstructured interviews etc..
  • Difficult to analyse statistically therefore to
    generalise from.
  • Greater validity as provides more detail means
    answers can be explored in more depth making
    conclusions more meaningful.
  • Quantitative data information is numerical in
    nature, such as generated by closed questions,
    likert scales etc..
  • Numerical data only tells you how often behaviour
    occurs, not the underlying motivation for
    behaviour, reduces thoughts attitudes to
    numbers which undermines validity.
  • Is reliable, as easy to repeat, easy to
    statistically analyse therefore to generalise
    from.

42
Sampling methods (a representative sample is
drawn from the target population)
43
Sampling methods (a representative sample is
drawn from the target population) continued.
  • For many psychological studies the sample is
    made up of students because researchers will
    often use opportunity sampling

44
Surveys questionnaires interviews
45
Research Methods/How Science Works
  • Surveys questionnaires interviews generate
    self-report data, i.e., information elicited from
    questions which relies on the participants
    reporting their own behaviour, feelings,
    attitudes etc.

46
Research Methods/How Science Works
  • Before starting a piece of research a hypothesis
    has to be made a hypothesis is a testable
    prediction. Prediction of human behaviour is
    made and then tested to ascertain if this
    hypothesis, or prediction, is actually true for
    most people
  • There are 3 types of hypothesis.

47
Research Methods/How Science Works Hypotheses
  • Experimental hypothesis This is a prediction
    testable by means of either laboratory, field or
    natural experiment.
  • Alternative hypothesis This is a prediction
    testable by means of research methodology other
    than experiments, e.g., questionnaires,
    interviews, observations, correlation studies,
    longitudinal, Cross-sectional cross-cultural
    studies.
  • Null hypothesis This is NOT the opposite of
    the alternative or experimental hypothesis it
    is a rejection of it. The null hypothesis states
    that the prediction is wrong, there is no such
    effect (as had been predicted) other than effects
    produced by chance.
  • E.g., Exp Hypothesis coffee makes you more
    alert Null hypothesis coffee has no effect on
    alertness, any increase in alertness due to
    chance factors.

48
Ethics research on human participants
  • Introduction researchers must ensure that
    public, after taking part in research, have
    confidence in the psychology profession have a
    positive perception of psychologists. All
    participants should be treated with respect
    their dignity well-being should be safe-guarded
    at all times.
  • Informed Consent participants must be made aware
    of the aims procedure of the research to enable
    them to make a fully informed decision about
    whether to take part or not. Sometimes, to avoid
    demand characteristics, participants may be
    deceived about the nature of the research, or
    they may be in a field experiment or observation
    where informed consent cannot be obtained prior
    to research. In these cases participants must be
    fully debriefed after the research. Where
    informed consent cannot be obtained presumptive
    consent can be obtained (would other people, if
    the scenario was explained to them agree to take
    part in the study themselves).
  • Debriefing participants must be fully debriefed
    at the end of the research, I.e., everything
    about the nature of the research must be revealed
    to them, they must be reminded of their right
    to withdraw their results from the study given
    the chance to ask any questions about the study.
    They must leave in same emotional state as they
    arrived.
  • Withdrawal participants must be made aware that
    they can withdraw at any time, even if they have
    been paid, and they can also withdraw their data.

49
Ethics research on human participants
  • Competence Researchers should do research and
    make judgements only in areas appropriate to
    their area of expertise must check with
    colleagues if there is any doubt or not carry
    it out research.
  • Deception wherever possible participants should
    not be deceived unless vital to preserve
    experimental validity should be fully debriefed
    at the end.
  • Confidentiality unless agreed with participants
    in advance, confidentiality should be maintained,
    no personal information should be disclosed
    pseudonyms used.
  • Protection from harm Participants should be
    protected from physical psychological harm
    should be exposed to no more risk than they would
    normally encounter in their usual lives.
    Participants should leave the research feeling
    positive about themselves the experimental
    experience.
  • Observation participants should only be observed
    in places where public behaviour is expected.

50
Research Methods/How Science Works
  • Reliability this refers to the consistency of
    data if the research is reliable we would
    expect that if it were repeated, with similar
    types of participants in similar circumstances,
    the same results would be obtained.
  • Validity Does the research actually measure what
    it is supposed to measure. In psychology testing
    abstract concepts can be difficult, we rely on
    observing measurable changes in behaviour
    attitudes/beliefs however, we cannot always be
    sure that what we think we are testing is
    actually being reflected in the participants
    responses these responses may be due to factors
    other than the ones we are thinking we are
    testing.
  • Subjectivity This refers to the interpretation
    of data, could participants data be interpreted
    differently, is the interpretation of data
    completely free from bias?
  • Objectivity Essentially the opposite, is data
    able to be interpreted in such a way that it is
    deemed unbiased, untainted by attitudes, beliefs
    values of the researcher.

51
Research Methods/How Science Works The Practical
  • Develop a hypothesis null hypothesis.
  • Consider the ethics of your practical questions
    should not cause distress, embarrassment.
  • Consider how you will generate quantitative
    qualitative data closed questions open-ended
    questions, questionnaire small-scale
    unstructured interview/semi or structured
    interview.
  • Sampling who is your target group what type of
    sampling method are you going to use to ensure a
    representative sample, what issues are there with
    your sampling method, how big will the sample be?
  • Operationalising your research how will you
    operationalise your questions variables, e.g.,
    if you are trying to measure attitudes, levels of
    prejudice, out/in-group loyalty or obedience how
    will your define measure these terms? What/who
    will you be comparing?
  • Conduct a pilot study ask a very small number of
    participants the questions you wish to first to
    ensure that they fulfil the criteria you want, if
    they dont you have the opportunity to change
    them at an early stage. These responses can be
    included in your final results.

52
Research Methods/How Science Works The Practical
  • Analysing the results Quantitative data look
    for numerical trends by establishing mean, median
    mode, range standard deviation.
  • Analysing the results Qualitative data look for
    trends/themes in the answers given to open-ended
    questions.
  • Reliability is your study reliable? What have
    you done to standardise instructions procedure
    to avoid experimenter bias ensure the research
    is well-controlled?
  • Validity What have you done to ensure high
    validity avoid demand characteristics and
    confounding/extraneous variables affecting your
    results?
  • Do your results support the alternative/experiment
    al hypothesis or the null hypothesis? Why? Have
    your participants been fully debriefed?
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