Module 53
Social Infl uence and Groups
591
Indeed, because the participants all agreed on the fi rst few trials, the procedure
appeared to be simple. But then something odd began to happen. From the perspec-
tive of the participant in the group who answered last on each trial, all the answers
of the fi rst six participants seemed to be wrong—in fact, unanimously wrong. And
this pattern persisted. Over and over again, the fi rst six participants provided answers
that contradicted what the last participant believed to be correct. The last participant
faced the dilemma of whether to follow his or her own perceptions or follow the
group by repeating the answer everyone else was giving.
As you might have guessed, this experiment was more contrived than it appeared.
The fi rst six participants were actually confederates (paid employees of the experi-
menter) who had been instructed to give unanimously erroneous answers in many
of the trials. And the study had nothing to do with perceptual skills. Instead, the
issue under investigation was conformity.
Asch found that in about one-third of the trials, the participants conformed to
the unanimous but erroneous group answer; about 75% of all participants conformed
at least once. However, he found strong individual differences. Some participants
conformed nearly all the time, whereas others never did.
CONFORMITY CONCLUSIONS
Since Asch’s pioneering work, literally hundreds of studies have examined confor-
mity, and we now know a great deal about the phenomenon. Signifi cant fi ndings
focus on:
• The characteristics of the group . The more attractive a group appears to its mem-
bers, the greater its ability to produce conformity. Furthermore, a person’s
relative status, the social rank held within a group, is critical: The lower a
person’s status in the group, the greater groups’ power over that person’s
behavior (Hogg & Hains, 2001).
• The situation in which the individual is responding . Conformity is considerably
higher when people must respond publicly than it is when they can do so
privately, as the founders of the United States noted when they authorized
secret ballots in voting.
• The kind of task . People working on ambiguous tasks and questions (those with
no clear answer) are more susceptible to social pressure. When asked to give
an opinion on something, such as what type of clothing is fashionable, a
person will more likely yield to conformist pressures than he or she will if
asked a question of fact. In addition, tasks at which an individual is less compe-
tent than others in the group make conformity more likely. For example, a
person who is an infrequent computer user may feel pressure to conform to
an opinion about computer brands when in a group of experienced computer
users.
• Unanimity of the group . Groups that unanimously support a position show the
most pronounced conformity pressures. But what about the case in which
people with dissenting views have an ally in the group, known as a social
supporter,
who agrees with them? Having just one person present who shares
the minority point of view is suffi cient to reduce conformity pressures (Prislin,
Brewer, & Wilson, 2002; Goodwin, Costa, & Adonu, 2004; Levine & Moreland,
2006).
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