Conformity (psychology)
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In psychology, conformity is the degree to which members of a group will change their behavior, views and attitudes to fit the views of the group. The group can influence members via unconscious processes or via overt social pressure on individuals.
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Famous experiments in conformity
- the Asch conformity experiments of Solomon Asch, whose development of the peer pressure theory aided greatly in the modern disciplines of psychology;
- the Milgram experiment of Stanley Milgram, which set out to measure the willingness of a participant to obey instructions from authority, even when the instructions (in this case, to 'torture' others by means of electric shocks) conflicted with the participant's personal conscience.
Subtypes
Herbert Kelman identified three subtypes of conformity:
- compliance - conforming only publicly, but keeping one's own views in private
- identification - conforming while a group member, publicly and privately, but not after leaving the group
- internalization - comforming publicly and privately, during and after group membership
Sociologists believe that
- compliance is conformity that is usually a result of a direct order,
- while internalization is conformity that comes from one's total and utter belief in his act.
See also
groupthink, mimetism, peer pressure
References
- Kelman, H. (1958). Compliance, identification, and internalization: three processes of attitude change. Journal of Conflict Resolution, 2, 31-60.
External links
- Changingminds: Conformity (http://changingminds.org/explanations/needs/conformity.htm)Template:Psych-stub