1. Sherif (1935)
The Autokinetic effect
On the next slide is a light. The light will move
and you have to say in which way it is
moving.
2.
3. Sherif (1935)
The autokinetic effect is when a stationary
spot of light appears to move due to small
movements of the eye
Sherif told participants to estimate by how far
the spot of light had moved.
Asked individually
Then exposed to the estimates of two other
participants
Estimates tended to converge to a group norm
which was an average of these individuals’
estimates.
4. Issues with the previous research
Sherif and Jenness both used ambiguous
situations to investigate conformity.
Little was known about conformity in nonambiguous situations (where the answer was
clear)
6. Asch – Star study
Aims
Investigate the effects of group pressure on
individuals in unambiguous situations.
To test conformity when the correct answer
was clear and obvious.
When confronted with an obviously incorrect
answer, would individuals would give an
answer which perpetuated this error
(conformed) or would they would give an
independent response?
7. Asch continued
Used 123 participants.
All were American, male students.
The method was a laboratory experiment.
8. The Main study
Findings for the MAIN study
In a control study carried out before this
experiment, it was found that less than 1% of
people made errors when carrying out this task
when by themselves. This suggests that this task
is _____________.
unambiguous
9. Findings from the baseline study
On the critical trials, the
average rate of
conformity was 32%.
74% agreed at least
once.
5% agreed on nearly
every trial
26% never gave a
wrong answer
Behaviour was constant
10. Those who did not conform…
Asch states “Those who strike out on the
path to independence, do not, as a
rule, succumb to the majority”.
confidence in their own judgment
capacity to recover from doubt
felt it was “their obligation to call the play as they
saw it”
11. Variations on the baseline procedure
Asch carried out a number of variations of the
same experiment. You need to know the
procedures for the MAIN study, and also
some of the variations.
12. Conclusions
The results from both the baseline study and
the variations suggest that there is a strong
tendency to conform to group pressures,
even in an unambiguous situation.
13. Conclusions
The pressure from the majority reduced when
the majority was smaller.
Pressure to conform was also reduced by the
presence of a dissenter, even if the dissenter
was giving a wrong answer.
Therefore, conformity depends a lot upon the
majority being unanimous. For example, when
the dissenter started to agree with the
majority, many participants began to conform.
15. Alternative evidence
Do Sherif and Jenness
support, contradict, or
develop Asch’s results?
Perrin and Spencer (1980)
1 person conformed out of
396 trials
Higher pressure to conform in
the 1950s
Perrin and Spencer used
science students
16. Alternative evidence
Nicholson et al (1985)
32% of British students and 38% of US students
conformed at least once.
Provides some support.