Norms & Conformity

17 important questions on Norms & Conformity

What are social norms?

Norms (accepted ways to think, feel, act) form in face-to-face interacting groups when group members observe each other’s attitudes or behaviours

What is the difference between descriptive social norms and injunctive social norms?

Descriptive social norms - agreed upon mental representation of what a group of people think, feel or do

Injunctive social norms - agreed upon mental representations of what a group of people should think, feel or do

e.g. parents do love their children = descriptive social norm; parents should love their children = injunctive social norm

---> when people act in the same way over again, they begin to think that they should act that way, and descriptive norms morph into injunctive ones (Guala & Mittone, 2010)

(p. 313 social textbook)

What is the difference between public and private conformity?

Private conformity: Personally convinced that group is correct; conform even when group is not present

Public conformity: Behave consistently with norms that are not privately accepted as correct

(private acceptance of group norms is far more prevalent and powerful p. 317 social textbook)
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What is the false consensus effect? (Ross, Greene, & House, 1977)

Overestimating extent to which others agree with our attitudes, preferences, behavioral choices

- the more important the connection is to these other people, the stronger the false consensus effect is (Morrison & Matthes, 2011)

EXP: Goel, Mason & Watts
= on Facebook, people significantly over-estimated the extent to which they and their friends agreed politically 
---> shows false consensus at both individual and group level

(p. 318 social textbook)

What is meant by informational influence?

The process by which group norms are privately accepted to achieve/maintain mastery of reality (Deutsch & Gerard, 1955)
p. 319 social textbook

i.e. believing input from others increases their chances of making an accurate decision - particularly likely to conform when stakes are high (Lun, Sinclair, Whitchurch & Glenn, 2007) - p. 319 social textbook

What study demonstrates that people are more accurate when they rely more on the group response and less on their own?

Yaniv & Chosin-Hillel, 2012

TASK: participants judged the calorie value of food after hearing others also make the same estimates
- some participants could see the food whereas others were blindfolded

RESULTS
- participants much more accurate when they could rely on others' responses
- when they could see the food, they were overly swayed by their own judgement

(p. 319 social textbook)

What are 3 motivational functions?

- need for mastery
- need for connectedness
- need to value me and mine

(good diagram slide 3, p. 3 lecture notes)

---> most of the time, agreement with in-group others fulfils all 3 motives simultaneously (p. 324 social textbook)

What is meant by a reference group?

People who are specifically relevant for a particular decision

E.g.
Intellective tasks: People with relevant knowledge and skills, good eyesight, etc.
Judgmental tasks: People who share our values, prejudices, frames of reference
Often those who share our social category memberships

What kind of groups have more influence than others?

In-groups have more influence than out-groups (Broninger, Krosnick, & Berent, 1995; Christensen and others, 2004)
(We do not expect to agree with out-group members - so there is little social influence from them (Robbins & Krueger, 2005)

= people are far more affected by social influence from in-group than from out-group members (Turner, 1982)

(p. 322-323 social textbook)

- agreeing with in-groups fulfils mastery, connectedness, and me and mine motives (p. 324 social textbook)

In what situations are mastery or connectedness more important in motivational functions regarding forming norms?

  • Mastery most important when task has verifiably correct solution (intellective tasks)

  • Connectedness most important with value-laden decisions, i.e., there is no verifiable right answer (judgmental tasks)

  • Most of the time, both motives are important

What can explain polarized norm formation?

When a group has an initial majority favoring one position, then multiple processes operate

What can polarization result from?

- Superficial processing (relying on others’ opinions)
- Systematic processing (thinking deeply about others’ reasoning and evidence) - makes group polarization even more likely (p. 329 social textbook)

---> these 2 processes make group polarization a likely outcome of norm formation as the average position in the group grows more extreme (p. 328 social textbook)

Describe how superficial processing has social influence on polarization.

  • Majority position can be a shortcut, heuristic - provides a shortcut to what people believe to be correct

  • If many group members rely on the majority, then group moves toward the extreme

  • Movement to extreme also motivated by the desire to be best the representative of group (Codol, 1975)


- p. 328 social textbook

What 5 aspects can undermine true consensus?

- when consensus seeking goes awry (because we have reliance on consensus)
- consensus without consideration
- consensus without independence (consensus is valid when multiple independent views converge)
- consensus without acceptance
- groupthink

---> good diagram incorporating more all of these, slide 1, p. 5

Do we have a reliance on consensus?

Yes in the way that it usually helps us form accurate views (mastery) and maintain connectedness

But: It can also lead to biased and unreliable decisions

What are 4 remedies for faulty consensus seeking?

---> Appoint devil’s advocates to bring up troublesome evidence

---> Select group membership for diversity of opinions, backgrounds

---> Reduce pressures for public conformity

---> All of these help give minority viewpoints due consideration

(p. 339 social textbook)

How can using norms strengthen consensus?

- Norms promoting careful and critical thinking about alternatives
- Norms favoring independence from contamination
- Norms favoring voicing dissenting opinions rather than going along with public conformity

(p. 346- 347 social textbook)

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