IBP Social Psychology Summary - Social influence - ch 8

Social and Organizational Psychology

IBP 2017-2018

 

Social influence

Social influence: efforts by one or more people to change the behavior, attitudes, or feelings of one or more others

Forms of influence:

  • Conformity 
  • Compliance
  • Obedience
  • Unintentional social influence

Conformity: efforts to change others’ behavior through norms about how to behave in a given situation

  • First systematically studied by Solomon Asch
  • Formal: as in speed limits, rules for playing games
  • Informal: as in the general rule “ don’t stare at people on an elevator”
  • Cohesiveness: degree of attraction felt by an individual toward some group, group size, and type of social norm operating in that situation
    •  Descriptive norms: describe what most people do in a given situation
    •  Injunctive norms: specify how people should behave in a given situation
  • Motives to conform:
    • The desire to be liked by others (normative social influence)
    •  the desire to be right or accurate (informational social influence)
  • Motives to not conform:
    • Being perceived as being higher in status than those who conform
    • Conformity can induce good people to perform bad actions (e.g.: Stanford prison experiment)

 

Compliance: efforts to change others’ behavior through direct requests

  • Foot-in-the-door technique: presenting target people with a small request and then following up with a larger request
  •  Lowball procedure: After the customer accepts the good offer, something happens that makes it necessary for the salesperson to change the deal and make it less advantageous for the customer
  • Door-in-the-face: starting with a very large request and then, after this is rejected, shift to a smaller request
  • Playing hard to get and the deadline technique: based on the principle of scarcity, where what is scarce or hard to obtain is seen as valuable

 

Obedience: following direct orders or commands from others

  • Many people obey orders from authorities, even if these orders require them to do harm (Milgram’s experiment)
  • How it works:
    • People are more willing to obey when the authority is responsible for their actions
    • They see signs of authority which remind them of the norm “obey those in authority”
    • There is a gradual escalation of the scope of the commands given
    • The rapid pace with which such situations proceed gives no time to reflect

 

Unintentional social influence: influence that occurs when other people change our behavior without intending to do so

  • Emotional contagion: instances in which our own emotions are influenced by those of others even when they do not intend to produce such effects
  • Symbolic social influence: occurs when our thoughts about others influence our actions or thoughts even if they are not present
  • Modeling: we learn from observing the actions of others or use them as a guide to our own behavior in situations where it is not clear how we should behave

 

 

 

 

References:

Baron, R., & Branscombe, N. (2016). Social psychology (14th edition) Harlow: Pearson Education Limited

--Chapter 8

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