reflected that he and others had ‘...internalised a set of destructive prison values that distances them from their own humanitarian values’
2 of 9
Reicher and Haslam (2006)
criticised SPE, findings difficult to verify, data observational, was behaviour due to acceptance of role that exp gave them, some evidence of resistance and guards that weren't tyrannical but it was ignored
3 of 9
Zimbardo, 1989)
his leadership was influential
4 of 9
Gergen, 1973; Johnson & Downing, 1973).
Researchers have questioned whether anonymity always leads to deindividuation and tyranny. Some have shown it depends on the situational cues
5 of 9
Brown, 2000
Behaviour from group members best understood by change from personal to social-identity (Brown, 2000). Role-consistent behaviour can be reframed as identity-consistent behaviour and not all groups allow tyrannical behaviour!
6 of 9
Banuazizi and Movahedi (1975):
unrealistic envi, SPE different from a real prison - knew they hadnt committed a crime - good people taking part in prestigious research
7 of 9
Haslam and Reicher, (2006)
The BBC experiment
8 of 9
Turner, 1982)
Whether they do depends on whether they internalize membership as part of self-concept
9 of 9
Other cards in this set
Card 2
Front
Zimbardo (2007)
Back
reflected that he and others had ‘...internalised a set of destructive prison values that distances them from their own humanitarian values’
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