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Asch Conformity Experiment

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    Dr. Philip Zimbardo: Okay I wanna give
    you a test of your visually acuity.
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    Your sensitivity to
    differences in line lengths.
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    So I'm going to show you a standard,
    and then I'll show three comparison lines.
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    One is going to be bigger,
    one is going to be shorter,
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    and one is going to be
    the same size as the standard.
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    Your job is, tell me which line,
    A, B, or C, is the same as the standard.
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    Seems like a simple judgement,
    you always get it right.
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    But now,
    before you give your answer,
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    there are going to be a half dozen
    to ten other people, like you, in the room,
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    and they're going to give
    their answers first.
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    An amazing thing happens,
    one after another,
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    they say the line that you see as shorter,
    is the same as the standard.
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    Shorter, shorter, shorter, shorter
    they don't say shorter,
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    they just say B, B, B, and so forth.
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    Now it's your turn.
    You know B is the wrong answer.
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    But what do you say?
    In this study done by Solomon Asch,
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    classic study of group conformity.
    The majority of people gave in.
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    Gave in on most of the critical trials,
    to agree with, to say publicly,
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    that they agreed with the majority.
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    This study is one of the
    first classic studies
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    on the power of the group.
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    As long as there are three or more people
    who agree among themselves
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    that reality is not the
    way you see it,
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    in many cases,
    you give in to see the world in their way.
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    Let's look at that study.
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    Experiment Conductor:
    The experiment you will be taking
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    part in today involves the
    perception of lengths of lines.
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    As you can see here,
    I have a number of cards
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    and on each there are several lines.
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    Your task is a very simple one:
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    you are to look at the line on the left
    and determine which of the three lines
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    on the right is equal to it in length.
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    Alright, we'll proceed in this order,
    you will give your answers-
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    Narrator: Only one of the people
    in the group is a real subject,
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    the fifth person
    with a white tee-shirt.
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    The others are confederates
    of the experimenter,
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    and have been told to give
    wrong answers on some of the trials.
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    The experiment begins uneventfully
    as subjects give their judgements
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    Male Subjects:
    Two, two, two, two, two.
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    Three, three, three, three.
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    But on the third trial, something happens.
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    Two, two, two, uh two.
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    The subject denies the evidence
    of his own eyes and yields to group influence.
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    Asch found subjects went along with
    the group on 37% of the critical trials.
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    But he found through interviews
    that they went along with
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    the group for different reasons.
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    Male Subjects:
    One, one.
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    Male #1: They must be right,
    there are four of them and one of me.
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    One.
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    Narrator: This subject's yielding is based
    on a distortion of his judgement.
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    He genuinely believes
    that the group is correct.
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    Male Subjects:
    One. One. One. Two.
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    One. Two. Two. Two.
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    Male #1: I know they're wrong,
    but why should I make waves?
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    Narrator: In this case,
    the subject knows he is right,
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    but goes along to avoid the
    discomfort of disagreeing with the group.
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    Here, the distortion
    is at the level of his response.
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    Male Subjects:
    Two, Two, Two, Two.
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    Narrator: In the previous experiment,
    the naïve subject stood alone against the group.
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    In this variation,
    Asch gave the naïve subject a partner,
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    here seated in the third position,
    who also gives the correct response.
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    Male Subjects:
    One, one, two, one, um two.
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    Narrator: With a partner,
    yielding drops to only five percent
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    of the critical trials
    compared to 37% without a partner.
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    Although subjects report
    warmth and good feeling
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    toward the partner,
    they typically deny that he played
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    a role in their own independence.
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    The partnership variation shows
    that much of the power of the group came,
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    not merely from its numbers
    but from the unanimity of its opposition.
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    When that unanimity is punctured,
    the group's power is greatly reduced.
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    Sometimes we go along
    with the group because
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    what they say convinces
    us they are right.
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    This is called
    informational conformity.
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    But sometimes we conform
    because we are apprehensive
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    that the group will
    disapprove if we are deviant.
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    This is called normative conformity.
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    The strength of the normative factor
    is shown in another variation carried out by Asch.
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    In this variation,
    the subject is told that
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    because he had arrived late,
    he would have to write his answers.
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    Subjects in this private response
    experiment are exposed
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    to the same amount of
    misleading information as other subjects,
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    but they're immune from any
    possible criticism by the group.
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    Male Subjects:
    One, one, one-
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    Narrator: And this enormously reduces
    the pressure to conform.
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    Conformity drops by 2/3.
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    Asch's experiment is a classic.
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    It reveals how people
    will deny what they see,
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    and submit to group pressure.
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    It allows us not
    only to observe conformity,
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    but to study the conditions
    that increase or reduce its occurrence.
Title:
Asch Conformity Experiment
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
05:48

English, British subtitles

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