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Social Norms

Social Norms. September 7, 2006. Class Objectives. Define the concept of social norms. Address the following questions : When do norms have the greatest influence on behavior? How and why are norms perceived and misperceived?. What would happen if?.

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Social Norms

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  1. Social Norms September 7, 2006

  2. Class Objectives • Define the concept of social norms. Address the following questions: • When do norms have the greatest influence on behavior? • How and why are norms perceived and misperceived?

  3. What would happen if? • You cut into the middle of a line by yourself and stayed in line for at least 2 minutes? • You sang loudly on a public bus? • You positioned yourself 6 inches from an acquaintance’s nose during a conversation? • You laughed during a funeral? • How would other people behave? • How would you feel?

  4. (1) Norms • Definition: Group norms are the informal rules that groups adopt to regulate group members’ behavior. • Sanctions exist to punish those who do not comply. • We can identify norms when they are violated: • Wait for your turn. • Remain quiet on the bus. • Maintain interpersonal distance. • Assume a somber demeanor during a funeral. • How do norms form and what happens when these norms are broken?

  5. Early Evidence of Norms • Sherif (1936) interested in the formation of group norms. • Norm: Individual and group judgments in an ambiguous situation. • Autokinetic effect: A stationary point of light appears to move in a dark room without any external frame of reference. • Individuals first asked to estimate how far the light moved alone (100 times) and then again as a member of a group.

  6. Results (Individuals) • Individuals established a personal norm that guided their judgments about how far the light was moving. • Each individual had their own estimate of distance based on their personal experience. • Question: Would each individual’s judgments become more similar when making estimates as a group?

  7. Results (In groups) • The group formed a new estimate of how far the light was moving that was unique to the group and different from the judgment of each individual. • Over time the group agreed on how far the light move despite the fact that the light neveractually moved at all.

  8. Why do norms exist? Norms ensure the survival of the group. • Do you agree with this statement? • Are all norms useful? • Can you think of norms that persist despite the fact that they are dysfunctional? • Tautological reasoning: The norms exist because they work and we know they work or else they wouldn’t exist!

  9. (2) When Do Norms Influence Behavior? • Do norms ACTUALLY influence behavior? • Study of Littering Behavior: • Injunctive norm: People should litter or they should not litter. • Descriptive norm: The parking garage is littered or it is not littered. • Norm Salience (Study 1): • Confederate carried a large handbill and threw it on the ground.

  10. Two Important Predictions • Prediction 1: • Subjects who saw the confederate litter into the fully littered environment would litter more than those who did not see such littering. • Prediction 2: • Subjects who saw the confederate litter into the clean environment would be less likely to litter than those who did not see such littering. • Key Point: Contrary to conformity prediction.

  11. Results • Confederate threw the handbill into the littered environment, thus calling attention to the descriptive norm: • IT IS OK TO LITTER HERE! • When littering norm was salient: • 54% of the subjects actually littered. • When littering norm was not salient: • Only 32% of the subjects of the subjects littered.

  12. Results (continued) • Confederate threw the handbill into the clean environment, thus calling attention to the descriptive norm: • IT IS NOT OK TO LITTER HERE! • When anti-littering norm was salient: • Only 6% of the subjects littered. • When anti-littering norm was not salient: • 14% of the subjects littered.

  13. More Littering Into Clean Environment

  14. Implications • Norms can often be very subtle. • Are you always aware the you are following a norm? Are there situations in which you are more aware than others? (E.g. Picnic vs. Funeral) • Norms have a powerful influence on behavior when people are focused on the norms in a given situation. • What are different strategies for calling attention to a norm? (E.g. Shoes in someone’s entry hall during a party).

  15. How are norms perceived and are these perceptions accurate? • Gambling in Elm Hollow (Shank, 1932) • Members of the community nearly unanimous in their support of the church’s restrictions on gambling, smoking and drinking. • Yet, the author often gambled, drank and smoked in the privacy of people’s homes. • Private attitudes did not reflect the public norm.

  16. Pluralistic Ignorance • Definition: Individuals make systematic errors in their perceptions of the other members of a collective and their relation to those members. • In other words, • No one believes, but everyone thinks that everyone else believes.

  17. Pluralistic Ignorance at ILR • Are there any widely shared beliefs at ILR that might reflect pluralistic ignorance? • How would you know?

  18. Consequences of Pluralistic Ignorance • Mistaken feelings of alienation and deviance. • Gamblers felt estranged from the town without knowing that they were actually typical. • Students who felt deviant because of their views on alcohol were less likely to attend their college reunion. • Male students conformed to the misperceived norm by drinking more.

  19. Individual versus the Group • The “group” has a reality above and beyond the individuals that compose it. • A college campus can be more pro-alcohol than its students. • Two campuses can differ on their attitudes toward alcohol even if their students do not. • Norms on campus can change even if the attitudes of its students have not.

  20. Before you go… • Complete brief survey about social issues for class on Tuesday.

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