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Groups

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Title: Groups


1
Groups
  • 10/9/07

2
How do groups influence individuals?
3
What is a group?
  • A group is a set of individuals who have at least
    one of the following characteristics
  • Direct interactions with each other over a period
    of time.
  • A shared, common fate, identity, or set of goals.
  • A collective is an assembly of people engaging in
    a common activity but having little direct
    interaction with each other.

4
Why form groups?
  • Evolutionary Needs
  • Preservation
  • Mating
  • Psychological Needs
  • Affiliation
  • Self-Knowledge

5
3 Questions, 3 Contradictions
  • Do groups behave more or less morally than
    individuals?
  • Do groups perform better or worse than an equal
    number of individuals?
  • Do groups make better decisions or worse
    decisions than individuals?

6
Do groups behave more or less morally?
  • Yes!
  • Public self-awareness When in front of an
    audience, people are more likely to act in accord
    with their enduring attitudes and values
  • No!
  • Deindividuation When in large groups, people can
    act in uninhibited, impulsive, and destructive
    ways

7
Deindividuation
  • Loss of individual identity accompanied by
    diminished self-regulation that comes over a
    person when he or she is in a large group

8
Deindividuation
  • Zimbardo (1970)
  • Antecedent Conditions
  • Anonymity
  • Diffusion of Responsibility
  • Energizing Effect of Others
  • Stimulus Overload
  • Internal State
  • Lessened self-observation and self-evaluation
  • Lessened concern with the evaluation of others
  • Weakening of internal controls
  • Lessened concern with shame, guilt, fear emotions
  • Behavioral Effects
  • Impulsivity
  • Irrationality
  • Emotionality
  • Antisocial activity

9
Suicide Baiting
  • Urging a person on the verge of committing
    suicide to take his life

10
Suicide Baiting
  • Mann (1981)

Percentage of times that suicide baiting occurred
11
Warfare
  • When soldiers are deindividuated, they are more
    barbarous during warfare
  • Celts vs. Scots

12
Halloween Shenanigans
  • Halloween night is probably the best example of
    how deindividuation leads to uninhibited and
    impulsive behavior.
  • Diener et al.s (1976) Halloween Study

13
Halloween Study
  • Diener et al (1976)
  • Percentage of trick-or-treaters who took more
    than one piece of candy

14
Groups and Individual Identity
  • So, groups can have two contradictory influences
    on identity
  • Individuation emphasize individual identity by
    focusing attention on the self
  • Deindividuation reduced sense of identity as a
    result of large groups
  • Individuation leads individuals to think about
    how they are different from others
    deindividuation makes them more similar
  • This tension is can be resolved
  • Optimal distinctiveness theory

15
Optimal Distinctiveness Theory
  • When people feel very similar to others, they
    seek to be different
  • When they feel different, they try to be more
    similar

16
Effects of Groups on Performance
  • Do groups perform better or worse than an equal
    number of individuals?

17
  • Triplett (1898)

18
Social Facilitation
  • Proposition that the presence of others increases
    the performance of individuals
  • Why?
  • Evaluation apprehension concern for how others
    are evaluating us leads us to work harder
  • Problems

19
Groups Inhibit Performance
  • Anecdotal evidence
  • Shooting a free-throw
  • Ringelmann (1913)
  • Working in a group, individuals give less effort
    than when they are alone
  • Allport (1920)
  • Individuals provided better philosophical
    refutations than groups
  • Additional evidence
  • Arithmetic problems, memory tasks, maze learning

20
Social Loafing
  • The tendency to exert less effort when working on
    a group task
  • Group assignments
  • Latane et al. 1979
  • Participants were asked to cheer or clap as
    loudly as they can
  • IV Participants completed the task either alone
    or in a group.
  • DV Amount of sound produced per person

21
When is Social Loafing Less Likely to Occur?
  • People believe that their own performances can be
    identified and thus evaluated, by themselves or
    by others.
  • The task is important or meaningful to those
    performing it.
  • People believe that their own efforts are
    necessary for a successful outcome.
  • The group expects to be punished for poor
    performance.
  • The group is small.
  • The group is cohesive.

22
Resolving the Contradiction
  • Does being in a group lead to greater performance
    (social facilitation) or worse performance
    (social loafing)?
  • Bob Zajonc (rhymes with science)
  • Explained why the contradiction exists
  • Dominant Response In a hierarchy of responses
    this is the one you are most likely to make in a
    given situation

23
Zajoncs Theory
24
Social Facilitation
  • Zajonc (1969) Investigated the effects of an
    audience on cockroach behavior.
  • The researchers placed a bright light (which
    cockroaches dislike) on one end of simple maze
    and timed how long it took for the roaches to
    reach a darkened box at the other end of the maze
  • IV Task was done alone, or task was done in the
    presence of other roaches who were in audience
    boxes
  • Results Cockroaches completed the task FASTER in
    the presence of other roaches than when alone

Simple Maze
25
Social Impairment
  • In a second study, roaches had to navigate a
    complex maze, where they had to make the correct
    turn in order to reach the goal
  • IV Again, the task was done alone, in the
    presence of other roaches who were in audience
    boxes
  • Results Cockroaches completed the complex task
    SLOWER in the presence of other roaches than when
    alone

Complex Maze
26
Groups Continued10/11/07
  • Announcements
  • Das Experiment
  • Exam Review Sheet
  • Semester Project Description

27
Zajoncs theory of social facilitation
Mere Presence or Evaluation Apprehension?
28
Mere presence or Evaluation apprehension?
  • Competing explanations
  • Cottrell et al. (1968)

29
Mere presence or evaluation apprehension?
  • Markus (1978)

Time to change item of clothing
(novel clothes)
(own clothes)
30
3 Questions, 3 Contradictions
  • Do groups behave more or less morally than
    individuals?
  • Do groups perform better or worse than an equal
    number of individuals?
  • Do groups make better decisions or worse
    decisions than individuals?

31
Group Decisions
  • Groups make better decisions that individuals
  • When people come togetherthey may surpass,
    collectively and as a body, the quality of the
    few bestWhen there are many who contribute to
    the process of deliberation, each can bring his
    share of goodness and moral prudence Aristotle

32
Groups make better decisions
  • The Wisdom of Crowds (Surowiecki, 2004)
  • Sports gambling
  • Who Wants to Be a Millionaire
  • Transactive Memory process by which members of a
    small group remember different kinds of
    information
  • Brainstorming creative thinking in groups in
    which group members are encouraged to generate as
    many ideas as possible
  • More enjoyable than working alone
  • More satisfied with outcome

33
Brainstorming
  • Buttypically leads to reduced performance
    (compared to same number of individuals)
  • Factors that reduce the effectiveness of
    brainstorming
  • Production Blocking when people have to wait for
    their turn to speak, they may forget their ideas
    or lose interest
  • Free Riding As others contribute, some
    individuals may feel less motivation to
    contribute
  • Evaluation Apprehension In the presence of
    others, some people may be hesitant to respond
  • Performance Matching Group members work only as
    hard as they see other members work

34
Better Brainstorming
  • A more effective approach to brainstorming is to
    have individuals first brainstorm by themselves
    and then meet as a group
  • Members should be encouraged to express all
    ideas, even if they sound crazy
  • The more ideas, the better
  • No criticizing of ideas during brainstorming
    stage
  • Individuals should be free to build on others
    ideas

35
Group Decisions
  • Many contexts in which group decisions are no
    better and sometimes worse than individual
    decisions
  • Groupthink A kind of faulty thinking on the part
    of highly cohesive groups in which the critical
    scrutiny that should be devoted to an issue is
    subverted by social pressures to reach a
    consensus.

36
Groupthink
37
Essential Elements of Groupthink
38
Reducing Groupthink
  • Limiting premature seeking of concurrence
  • Open style of leadership
  • Devils advocate
  • Subgroup discussions
  • Subgroups should separately discuss the same
    issue.
  • Avoid isolation, groups should consult widely
    with outsiders.
  • A second chance meeting should be held to
    reconsider the decision before it is implemented.

39
Group Decisions Risky or Conservative?
  • Stoner (1961) Hypothesized that group decisions
    would be more conservative than individual
    decisions
  • Asked groups or individuals to evaluate 12
    scenarios
  • Mr. A., an electrical engineer, who is married
    and has one child, has been working for a large
    electronics corporation since graduating from
    college. He is assured a lifetime job with
    modest, although adequate salary. While attending
    a convention he is offered a job from a small,
    newly founded company that has a highly uncertain
    futureThe new job would pay more to start and
    would offer a share of the ownership and profits
    if the company survived competition from larger
    firms.

40
Stoner (1961)
  • Imagine that you are advising Mr. A. Listed below
    are several probabilities or odds that the new
    company will be financially sound
  • Please check the lowest probability that you
    would consider acceptable
  • The chances are 1 in 10 that the company will
    prove financially sound
  • The chances are 3 in 10 that the company will
    prove financially sound
  • The chances are 5 in 10 that the company will
    prove financially sound
  • The chances are 7 in 10 that the company will
    prove financially sound
  • The chances are 9 in 10 that the company will
    prove financially sound
  • Mr. A. should not take the job no matter what the
    probabilities

41
Stoner (1961)
  • Contrary to his predictions, group decisions
    tended to be riskier than individual decisions
  • They were more likely to take worse odds
  • Risky Shift tendency for groups to take greater
    risks that the same individuals would have
    decided (on average) individually

42
Stingy Shifts
  • But other evidence contradicted the notion of
    risky shift (Stoner, 1961)
  • Group decisions were more conservative
  • Mr. C., a married man with a 7 year old son, can
    provide his family with all the necessities of
    life, but few luxuries. Mr. C.s mother recently
    died, leaving her grandson a small inheritance
    she had accumulated by scrimping and saving. Mr.
    C. would like to invest his sons inheritance in
    the stock market. He is considering investing in
    either blue-chip stocks that should earn a 6
    return, or in a new biotech company that he has
    heard about. If things go well for the biotech
    company, he could quadruple his money in the
    first yearbut if things go poorly, he could lose
    all the money

43
Explaining the contradiction
  • Why would some groups make more conservative
    choices, whereas others would make riskier
    choices?
  • Evidence suggests what group discussion does is
    make people more inclined to go in the direction
    in which they were already predisposed to go
  • Group polarization a shift toward more extreme
    positions resulting from group discussion

44
Group Polarization Example
  • Imagine you were considering the pros and cons of
    going to grad school, and you talked it over with
    two groups
  • Your family
  • Who was initially slightly opposed to the idea
  • Your fellow students
  • Who were initially slightly favorable
  • After discussion within each group what is likely
    to happen?

45
Group Polarization Example
Definite GO
Attitude Towards Grad School
Unsure
Definite NO (Get A Job!)
Before Group Discussion
After Group Discussion
46
What causes group polarization?
  • Persuasive Arguments Explanation
  • The greater the number and persuasiveness of the
    arguments to which members are exposed, the more
    extreme their attitudes become.
  • Minority positions are counter-argued quickly
  • Some arguments provide new information.
  • Hearing others repeat our arguments validates our
    reasoning, giving us more confidence in our
    attitude.

47
What causes group polarization?
  • Social comparison explanation
  • Individuals develop their social reality by
    comparing themselves to others
  • The construction of social reality in like-minded
    groups is a two-step process
  • People discover more support for their own
    opinion than they had originally anticipated.
  • This discovery sets up a new norm, a more extreme
    norm, and motivates members to go beyond that
    norm.
  • If believing X is good, then believing double X
    is even better

48
Polarization in modern life
  • Polarization occurs when most individuals in a
    group tend to prefer one option to another at the
    outset
  • This isnt necessarily true for naturally forming
    groups
  • Diversity vs. homogeneity
  • Group polarization is particularly troubling
    because often in contemporary life dialogue among
    varying positions is discouraged
  • You are either with us or against us GWB
  • The differences of opinion, and the jarring of
    partiespromote deliberation and circumspection
    and serve to check the excesses of the majority
    Alexander Hamilton
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