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Jackson and Williams (1986)

Jackson and Williams (1986). Simple vs. complex mazes on computer Another participant worked on identical task in other room Researcher: Each performance would be evaluated separately, or Computer would average scores (no accountability). Time to complete maze. evaluation. (long).

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Jackson and Williams (1986)

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  1. Jackson and Williams (1986) • Simple vs. complex mazes on computer • Another participant worked on identical task in other room • Researcher: • Each performance would be evaluated separately, or • Computer would average scores (no accountability)

  2. Time to complete maze evaluation (long) No evaluation (fast) easy difficult Difficulty of mazes

  3. Deindividuation Original view: loosening of normal constraints on behavior when people are in a crowd Leading to…“mob behavior”

  4. Newer view of Deindividuation • Two factors • Lower accountability • Increases obedience to “local” norms

  5. Groups: Decision Making

  6. Initial issues • Most major decisions in the world are made by groups • United Nations, Courts (e.g. U.S. Supreme Court) • Elected bodies (e.g. Parliament, Congress) • Presidents rarely make decisions completely alone • WHY? • Are groups always better than single individuals? • Huge scientific literature on exactly this question!

  7. Process loss • General term covering many group processes • Hamper extent to which groups can solve problems efficiently, effectively • “Social” losses • Conversation/interactions irrelevant to task • Distractions • Failure to share unique information • Stasser & Titus (1985)

  8. Groupthink • Probably most famous process loss • Definition: people begin to value group cohesiveness and solidarity more than the need to consider the facts in a realistic manner. • Can lead to disastrous decisions • JFK’s decision to invade Cuba • Challenger disaster (1986) • Possibly, Columbia (2003)

  9. The road to groupthink Symptoms • Illusion of invulnerability • Moral certainty • Stereotyped view of outgroup • Self-censorship • Direct pressure to conform • Illusion of unanimity • Mindguards Antecedents • Group is (already) cohesive • Isolated • Directive leader • Stress • Poor decision-making rules Defective decision making • Incomplete survey of alternatives • Failure to examine risks of favored alternative • Poor information search • Few contingency plans

  10. Specific steps to avoid groupthink • Leader—remain impartial (if possible) • Seek outside opinions • Create subgroups • Seen anonymous opinions

  11. Group polarization • Original finding (Stone, 1962) seemed to suggest “risky shift” (!!) • Newer view: group polarization, not riskiness per se • Whatever way the group is leaning initially, members tend to polarize further in that direction

  12. Who (and what) makes a great leader? • The “holy grail” of social psychology! • Two general views • 1. The “great person” theory • Leadership and personality • Fascinating study by Dean Simonton on U.S. presidents • General picture—no such thing as “leadership personality” • 2. “Right person in right situation” view • Contingency theory of leadership • Received good support • Gender and leadership

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