IB Psychology HL - SCLOA - Discuss the Use Of Compliance Techniques
Compliance is a form of social influence where a person changes their behaviour in response to a request from another person or group, without necessarily changing their private beliefs.
Compliance
a form of social influence
- involves intellectual and emotional submission in reaction to a general request
Key Terms
Compliance
a form of social influence
- involves intellectual and emotional submission in reaction to a gener...
compliance techniques
lowballing
- foot in the door (FITD)
FITD
making a small request to increase compliance
then later follow up with a larger request
Freedman and Fraser (1966) - procedure
2 conditions:
- FITD 1 (same topics)
- FITD 2 (different topics)
- control (proceeded directly to larger request)
Freedman and Fraser (1966) - findings and conclusion
control: only 17% compliance
FitD 1: nearly full compliance with small request, and 76% compliance in actual request
why does FitD work?
Cialdini (2009):
- due to our need to be consistent and show commitment to our previous acts
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| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
Compliance |
- involves intellectual and emotional submission in reaction to a general request |
compliance techniques |
- foot in the door (FITD) |
FITD |
Main study: Freedman and Fraser (1966) |
Freedman and Fraser (1966) - procedure |
FitD 1: Homeowners were requested to display a small ‘drive safely’ sign, then 2 weeks later asked to display a bigger sign |
Freedman and Fraser (1966) - findings and conclusion |
|
why does FitD work? | Cialdini (2009): |
necessary precautions taken in FitD | Burger (1999):
Chartrand et al. (1999): if the same person makes both requests, the likelihood of refusal is higher |
evaluation of FitD |
|
Lowballing |
Main studies: Burger and Cornelius (2003) |
Burger and Cornelius (2003) - Procedure |
|
Burger and Cornelius (2003) - Findings and Conclusion |
|
why does lowballing work? | Cialdini (2009): when people make public commitments; new self image increases resolve to commit |
effectiveness of FitD vs Lowballing | Hornik et al. (1990):
|
examine |
when examining each technique: |