PSYCHOLOGY STUDY LINE

This blog is for those who are looking for help in their university curriculum in psychology. The articles here are from various sources and belong to vast field . Hope this blog would prove useful for the college goers and lay man interested in the subject!!! - Ashish Pillai


Introduction 

Imagine living all by yourself, in total isolation. Will you be as careful of as you dress or eat? Our attitudes manners and actions are strongly affected by other persons. 

The process by which others affect us is known as Social Influence. Social influence is the change in behavior that one person causes in another, intentionally or unintentionally, as a result of the way the changed person perceives themselves in relationship to the influencer, other people and society in general. 

According to Baron:
Conformity is a type of social influence in which individuals change their attitudes or their behavior in order to adhere to existing social norms.
Compliance is a form of social influence involving direct requests from one person to another.
Obedience is a form of Social Influence in which one person simply orders one or more others to perform some actions.

In simple words by social influence it means how ones behavior effects another when he or she interacts with the society.

Wikipedia says:

"Social influence occurs when an individual's thoughts, feelings or actions are affected by other people. Social influence takes many forms and can be seen in conformity, socialization, peer pressure, obedience, leadership, persuasion, sales, and marketing.

In 1958, Harvard psychologist, Herbert Kelman identified three broad varieties of social influence.
Compliance is when people appear to agree with others, but actually keep their dissenting opinions private.
Identification is when people are influenced by someone who is liked and respected, such as a famous celebrity or a favorite uncle."

Internalization is when people accept a belief or behavior and agree both publicly and privately.
Social Influence covers topics like conformity, norms, social influence tactics such as norm of reciprocity, authority, scarcity, interpersonal influence, persuasion, power, advertising, mass media effects, political persuasion, propaganda, comparative influence, compliance, minority influence, influence in groups, cultic influence, social movements, social contagions, rumors, resistance to influence, influence across cultures, and the history of influence research.

Solomon Asch showed how a person could be influenced by others in a group to claim that a clearly shorter line in a group of lines was, in fact, the longest.
Stanley Milgram did classic experiments in obedience, where people off the street obeyed orders to give (what they thought were) life-threatening electric shocks to other people.
Example
You ask me to pass the salt. I comply by giving it to you.
You tell me to pass the salt. I obey by giving it to you.
I notice that people are using salt and passing it to the person on their left without comment. I conform by doing likewise.



Social Psychology is the scientific study of the way in which individuals are affected by social situations. Social psychology like other sciences is involved in explaining, predicting, understanding and verifying the relationships between individuals.(Worchel and Cooper)
Social psychology looks at a wide range of social topics, including group behavior, social perception, leadership, nonverbal behavior, conformity, aggression and prejudice. Social psychology is a branch of psychology which examines the impact of social influences on human behavior. This field is vast, encompassing a wide range of fields of study and several disciplines. Social psychology is also used in a range of disciplines and industries; many people utilize the principles of social psychology without even being aware of it when they try to control a group, influence someone's opinion, or explain why someone behaves in a particular way.

Social Psychology deals with the mental prcesses of man as a social bieng. It syudies the influence of group life on the mental development of an individual, the effect of individual mind on the group and the develoment of the mental life of the groups with themselves and in thier relations with one another. In other words, it is the study of individuals in interaction as members of groups and the effect of that interaction on them.

Like many scientists, social psychologists like to use empirical methods to conduct studies in their fields. These methods often involve experiments which can bring up complex ethical issues. One of the most infamous social psychology experiments was the Stanford Prison Experiment, which was ultimately shut down because it got out of control. Social psychologists rely on the efforts of ethics committees and review panels to ensure that their work is ethically allowable, in the hopes of avoiding a repeat of questionable experiments.The study of social psychology can explain why people form mobs, how groups make decisions, which social conditions can lead to aberrant behavior, and a wide range of other things. Social psychologists are constantly learning more about human behavior and the science behind human interactions, looking at everything from why people fail to help people in need to what leads people to conform, even in ethically dubious situations.

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