social psychology 0.0 / 5 ? PsychologyAggressionASEdexcel Created by: abbie01xoCreated on: 08-05-18 20:49 what are the results of milligrams study? all 40 pps obeyed up to 300v, 65% went up to 450v 1 of 28 conclusion of milgrams study the most important factor determining obedience is the situation 2 of 28 strengths of milgrams study reliable (standardised procedure), internal validity (high control), quantitative and qualitative 3 of 28 weaknesses of milgrams study lack ecological validity, unrepresentative sample, ethical concerns 4 of 28 what are milligrams 3 variations telephonic instructions, rundown office block, ordinary man 5 of 28 results for telephonic instructions? 22.5% went to 450 v 6 of 28 results for rundown office block? 47.5% 7 of 28 results for ordinary man? 20% 8 of 28 strengths of agency theory milgram, explaining real life atrocities, usefulness in society 9 of 28 weaknesses of agency theory adorno, removal of personal responsibility 10 of 28 results of burgers study? stopped at 150v or sooner (base condition)- 30%, modelled refusal condition- 36.7%, milligram- 17.5% 11 of 28 strengths of burgers study reliable, ethical, quantitative data 12 of 28 weaknesses of burgers study lacks ecological validity, difficulty with internal validity, not generalisable 13 of 28 what determines strength in social impact theory status, age, ability, relationship to target 14 of 28 what does immediacy refer to proximity or closeness in time and space 15 of 28 strengths of social impact theory math equation to predict behaviour, sedikides and Jackson, milligram 16 of 28 weaknesses of social impact theory not specifically relate to obedience, some people more resistant/passive, reductionist 17 of 28 what is social categorisation? seeing oneself as part of a group (in group) 18 of 28 what is social identification? taking on norms and attitudes of the group 19 of 28 what is social comparison see the in group as better than the out group 20 of 28 strengths of social identity theory tajfel's minimal group studies, apply to real life situations (Bristol riots), help to reduce prejudice (gaertner), 21 of 28 weaknesses of social identity theory reductionist, sherif, ignores role of poverty in prejudice 22 of 28 what does the realistic conflict theory state? when there is conflict between groups there is prejudice when they compete for same resources 23 of 28 when is prejudice more likely? when the resource is finite such as territory (one winner and one loser) 24 of 28 strengths of realistic conflict theory? ember and ember, sherif, reduce prejudice (Aronson et al) 25 of 28 weaknesses of realistic conflict theory tyerman and Spencer, ignores cultural differences 26 of 28 what are the factors affecting prejudice individual differences (personality), culture, situation 27 of 28 what personality traits are linked to prejudice neuroticism, extraversion, conscientiousness, openness to experience and agreeableness 28 of 28
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