Obedience
RevisionNotes.Co.Uk - Free Revision and Course Notes for UK Students
 
Home : A Level : Psychology : Social and Cognitive Psychology : Obedience
 Revision Notes
 GCSE
 A-Level
 University
 IB
 User Options
 Search
 My Revision Notes
 Bookmark Page
 Contribute
 Contribute Work
 Other Sites
 AcademicDB
 Coursework.Info

Obedience
Bookmark this page

complying with the demands of an authority figure

Hedy Brown - conformity has to do with psychological need for acceptance by others and entails going along with one's peers in a group situation, but obedience has to do with the social power and status of an authority figure in a hierarchical situation

Milgram's studies (1963;1974) demonstrated that people would obey an experimenter's orders to deliver electric shocks to an innocent victim.

Basic experiment

65% continued to obey throughout.

He concluded that a substantial proportion of people do as they are told, irrespective of the content of the act and without limitations of conscience, so long as they perceive that the command comes from a legitimate authority.

Criticisms of Milgram

ethics! - unacceptable to place innocent subjects in this position

Milgram claims stress was not anticipated - expected subjects to disobey sooner; in any case the subject 'free' to leave at any time; subsequent questionnaires to subjects showed that they were glad to participate in experiment ( Rosnow - 78 - experiments can help individual to review value systems)

Can lab experiments be generalised to outside world?

Hofling et al (1966)

would nurses comply with instructions to involve them in infringing hospital regulations and medical ethics

since 1966 nurses may have become less obedient and deferential

Other Notes in this Category

  1. Attitudes
  2. Attitudes and Behaviour
  3. Attribution
  4. Conformity
  5. Crowds and Territoriality
  6. Goffman - Symbolic Interactionist
  7. Impression Formation
  8. Inference Model
  9. Intuition model
  10. Is there a conformity personality?
  11. Obedience
  12. Persuasion
  13. Prejudice
  14. Self Concept
  15. Self-attribution processes
  16. Social Influence
  17. Stereotypes and Stereotyping
  18. The Primacy-Recency effect
  19. Zimbardo

Didn't find this useful?

  • Visit Coursework.Info for over 14,000 GCSE, A-Level and University Essays

 

© UK-Learning 2001-3. Disclaimer, Feedback, Other Stuff.