Conformity Social Psychology

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For people working in the psychological field it is important to understand and acknowledge all aspects of psychology. This includes social psychology, which is a very interesting and important part of the psychological world. Within social psychology there is a concept called conformity, which is a form of social influence. Conformity can be defined “as a change in a person’s behavior or opinions as a result of real or imagined pressure from a person or a group of people” (Aronson, 2011, p. 19). Specific behaviors that occur in groups tend to be viewed as accurate behaviors. Therefore, these behaviors are seen as rewarding to take part in by the individual because the feel included (Güngör, Karasawa, Boiger, Dinger, & Mesquita, 2014). With …show more content…

In some situations conformity even led to people not helping others when they are clearly in distress (Aronson, 2011). Not helping other people when they need help seems so hard to believe, but it actually happens often enough that they have called this phenomenon the bystander effect. Research has told us that 70 percent of people will help others in distress if they are alone then if other people are present. If another person was present only 20 percent of people would offer their help (Aronson, 2011). Next, Terlecki and Buckner (2015) found that social anxiety and heavy drinking could be mediators for coping and conformity. The finding suggest that people with social anxiety use heavy drinking as a coping mechanism. Also, they conform to heavy drinking to avoid scrutiny from their peers (Terlecki & Buckner, …show more content…

This experiment was led by Phillip Zimbardo. The experiment assigned Stanford students to take on the roles of prison guards. Along with taking on this role of a prison guard they would conform to treating the prisoners cruelly. Together as guards they humiliated and tortured the prisoners for five days. The Stanford prison experiment inclined Zimbardo to come up with the term “The Lucifer Effect”, which refers to good people turning bad. Also, in a study that looked at measuring peer pressure, popularity, and conformity in adolescent boys and girls and how they related to school performance, sexual attitudes, and substance abuse. The results stated that peer pressure and peer conformity measures were stronger predictors of risk behavior, such as substance use, delinquency, dating attitudes, sexual behavior, and poor school performance, than popularity was (Santor, Messervey & Kusumakar, 2000). As you may notice conformity can make people engage in awful and maladaptive behaviors, but what makes people conform? Why would they do something someone else is doing even if they know it is

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