In the early 1950s‚ Solomon Asch conducted a series of experiments to investigate the effect of social pressures on an individual. A group of seven to nine college students‚ all male‚ assembled in a classroom for a “psychological experiment” (page 598; par. 1). These young men
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Solomon Asch - Conformity Experiment Asch believed that the main problem with Sherif’s (1935) conformity experiment was that there was no correct answer to the ambiguous autokinetic experiment. How could we be sure that a person conformed when there was no correct answer? Asch (1951) devised what is now regarded as a classic experiment in social psychology‚ whereby there was an obvious answer to a line judgment task. If the participant gave an incorrect answer it would be clear that this was
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An example of this is: Solomon Asch’s study on conformity. Asch showed a group of people a line on a card (the target line) and then asked them aloud to identify which line (A‚ B‚ or C) matched the original. The answer was always obvious and the true participant always answered last or second last after the confederates had given their answer. The confederates were instructed to give the wrong answer 12 out of 18 trials (known as the critical trials). This meant that the participant had to choose
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|Solomon Asch experiment: A study of conformity After reading the social psychological experiment on Solomon Asch’s study of conformity‚ I now understand why so many people conform even when they know the answer is wrong. It was apparent
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Solomon Asch‚ a social psychologist had a hypothesis and he decided to test an experiment based on his hypothesis. Asch’s hypothesis theory was... Would people still conform to the group if the group opinion was clearly wrong? Well‚ to test his theory he chose a simple and objective task with an obvious answer. A group of people sat at a table and viewed a series of cards‚ on one side of each of the card was a standard line and on the other side were three comparison lines. Now‚ the individual’s
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occurs when individuals respond to peer- pressure by changing their behaviour to adapt to what the group of people they’re with do. Solomon Asch conducted a study on conformity in 1951 which addressed the contemplation of conformity and non-conformity as a result of peer pressure; his studies are also relevant to pro-social and anti-social behaviour. Solomon Asch’s experiment was conducted by having five participants and they would sit along side each other at a long table where the experimenter
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Solomon Asch Solomon Asch was a social psychologist way back in the 1950s‚ which is even before my parents were born. Asch conducted a famous experiment on the effects of peer pressure on a person. What he found was that a person had a “tendency to conform‚ even it means to go against the person’s basic perceptions”. The web page also said that people “are swayed by the masses against our deepest feelings and convictions”. 1 These experiments that Asch created developed the theory of conformism
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The Asch phenomenon is a concept derived from the findings of a study conducted in 1951. Solomon Asch (1907 1996) originally conducted this experiment to explain conformity to majority-established norms (Moghaddam‚ 1998). The subjects involved in the study were brought into a room with seven other students (who were all working for Asch and were instructed on what to do) and seated second-to-last around a table. The subjects were told that the experiment was concerned with accuracy and visual perception
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Solomon Asch conducted an experiment titled the ‘Asch Conformity Study‚’ in which he psychologically tested the certain conditions in which the judgement of an individual is affected by others. Asch used a lab experiment to study conformity; male students were selected to participate in a ‘vision test’ in Swarthmore College‚ in Pennsylvania. Asch used pairs of cards‚ and on one pair‚ three vertical lines of differing lengths were drawn‚ called the ‘Comparison’ lines. On the other pair‚ there was
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Conformity in a non-ambiguous situation (Asch‚ 1951) The Asch paradigm is an experimental technique‚ which is now note because of the many studies and experiments that Solomon Asch did for his conformity studies. The purpose of this study is basically proving weather the people say what they really think or just conform with other people’s answers. He tricked the participants who thought they were taking part to a study of visual perception then‚ Asch made them say which one of the comparison
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