Module 53
Social Infl uence and Groups
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an infl uential experiment conducted by Philip Zimbardo and colleagues. In the study,
the researchers set up a mock prison complete with cells, solitary confi nement cubi-
cles, and a small recreation area. The researchers then advertised for participants who
were willing to spend 2 weeks in a study of prison life. Once they identifi ed the
study participants, a fl ip of a coin designated who would be a prisoner and who
would be a prison guard. Neither prisoners nor guards were told how to fulfi ll their
roles (Zimbardo, Maslach, & Haney, 2000; Zimbardo, 1973, 2007).
After just a few days in this mock prison, the students assigned to be guards
became abusive to the prisoners by waking them at odd hours and subjecting them
to arbitrary punishment. They withheld food from the prisoners and forced them
into hard labor. On the other hand, the students assigned to the prisoner role soon
became docile and submissive to the guards. They became extremely demoralized,
and one slipped into a depression so severe he was released after just a few days. In
fact, after only 6 days of captivity, the remaining prisoners’ reactions became so
extreme that the study was ended.
The experiment (which, it’s important to note, drew criticism on both method-
ological and ethical grounds) provided a clear lesson: Conforming to a social role
can have a powerful consequence on the behavior of even normal, well-adjusted
people and induce them to change their behavior in sometimes undesirable ways.
This phenomenon may explain how the situation in which U.S. Army guards at the
Iraq Abu Ghraib prison found themselves could have led to their abusive behavior
toward the prisoners (Zimbardo, 2007; Haney & Zimbardo, 2009).
Compliance: Submitting
to Direct Social Pressure
When we refer to conformity, we usually mean a phenomenon in which the social
pressure is subtle or indirect. But in some situations social pressure is much more
obvious with direct, explicit pressure to endorse a particular point of view or behave
in a certain way. Social psychologists call the type of behavior that occurs in response
to direct social pressure
compliance.
Several specifi c techniques represent attempts to gain compliance. Those fre-
quently employed include:
•
Foot-in-the-door technique . A salesperson comes to your door and asks you to
accept a small sample. You agree, thinking you have nothing to lose. A little
later a larger request comes; because you have already agreed to the fi rst one,
you have a hard time turning it down.
The salesperson in this case is using a tried-and-true strategy that social
psychologists call the foot-in-the-door technique. In the
foot-in-the-door tech-
niqu e, you ask a person to agree to a small request and later ask that person to
comply with a more important one. It turns out that compliance with the more
important request increases signifi cantly when the person fi rst agrees to the
smaller favor.
Researchers fi rst demonstrated the foot-in-the-door phenomenon in a
study in which a number of experimenters went door to door asking resi-
dents to sign a petition in favor of safe driving (Freedman & Fraser, 1966).
Almost everyone complied with that small, benign request. A few weeks later,
different experimenters contacted the residents and made a much larger
request for the residents to erect a huge sign on their front lawns that read,
“Drive Carefully.” The results were clear: 55% of those who had signed the
petition agreed to the request to put up a sign, whereas only 17% of the
people in a control group who had not been asked to sign the petition agreed
to put up a sign.
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