Shared group membership predicts unintended social influence in a novel interactive task 2016-2019

DOI

This study used an innovative design which presented a large number of participants (N = 1139) with the opportunity to take part in an interactive game which measured the degree to which they conformed with behaviour modelled by confederates on a computer screen. Following a minimal group manipulation, participants were arbitrarily allocated to one of two groups represented by coloured dots (blue vs red). Six or ten pre-recorded confederate dots were also coloured blue and red (equal numbers of each colour) and moved around the screen during different tasks. Participant dot movements were measured to asses the degree to which their behaviour conformed with the behaviour of confederate dots of the same colour. Preliminary analyses found significant social identity influence effects in the two paradigms that the experiment was initially designed to test (direction followed in a maze [p = 0.007], and fidgeting behaviour [p = 0.0019]). No significant results were found for another task which involved choosing between two answers. However, exclusion criteria are yet to be confirmed for the data set.How and why do behaviours spread from person to person? In particular, how does aggression and violent behaviour spread? When, as in 2011, riots began in London, why did they then occur in Birmingham, Manchester, and Liverpool? One of the most common ways of addressing such issues is through the notion of 'contagion'. The core idea is that, particularly in crowds, mere exposure to the behaviour of others leads observers to behave in the same way. 'Contagion' is now used to explain everything from 'basic' responses such as smiling and yawning (where the mere act of witnessing someone yawn or smile can invoke the same response in another) to complex phenomena like the behaviour of financial markets and, of course, rioting. What is more, laboratory experiments on the 'contagion' of simple responses (such as yawning) serve to underpin the plausibility of 'contagion' accounts as applied to complex phenomena (such as rioting). Despite this widespread acceptance, the 'contagion' account has major problems in explaining the spread of behaviours. In particular, there are boundaries to such spread. If men smile at a sexist joke, will feminists also smile in response to the men's smiles? If people riot in one town, why is it that they also riot in some towns but not others? For example, in 2011, disturbances spread from London to Birmingham, Manchester and Liverpool but they did not spread to Sheffield, Leeds or Glasgow. 'Contagion' explanations cannot answer such questions because they assume that transmission is automatic. They do not take account of the social relations between the transmitter and receiver. We propose a new account of behavioural transmission based on the social identity approach in social psychology. This suggests that influence processes are limited by group boundaries and group content: we are more influenced by ingroup members than by outgroup members, and we are more influenced by that which is consonant with rather than contradictory to group norms. The social identity approach is therefore ideally suited to explaining the social limits to influence, both for 'basic' phenomena and rioting. In order to advance both theoretical understanding and practical interventions, our research will develop a social identity analysis of transmission processes at multiple levels. Accordingly, the aims and objectives of this research project are as follows: First, we will conduct a series of experimental studies on 'basic' behaviours (yawning, itching) to examine whether the effects of being exposed to a behaviour depend on observers and actors being fellow ingroup members. We will also examine 'complex' behaviours (aggression and rioting) to see if (1) observers are more influenced when the actors are ingroup members; (2) observers are more influenced by the responses of other observers when these are also ingroup members; (3) willingness to copy others depends upon whether their behaviour is consonant with observer group norms. Second, we will examine the spread of urban disorder during the 2011 English riots. We have been granted special access to the full data-set from the Guardian/LSE 'Reading the Riots' study (270 interviews with participants carried out immediately following the events). This, along with other secondary sources (such as detailed crime figures), will allow us to examine the extent to which the spread of these riots was linked to a sense of shared identity with those who had rioted previously (that is, those who rioted 'saw themselves' in those who rioted before them, and those who lacked such a sense were less likely to riot). Third, we will use our findings to generate a wider debate about the nature of psychological transmission and the practicalities of addressing them. Activities will include workshops which will bring together researchers, practitioners (e.g., the police) and policy-makers in local and national government to address how we can mitigate against the spread of riots and violence.

This study was run over 6 weeks at the British Science Museum in 151 groups. Visitors to the museum were invited to take part in a series of interactive games on a large screen using a tablet. These games were played as part of a group comprising other visitors playing at the same time. Consent was obtained prior to taking part, including parental consent in the case of minors. On completion of the games, participants were debriefed.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-853849
Metadata Access https://datacatalogue.cessda.eu/oai-pmh/v0/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_ddi25&identifier=b0d8b27babfe8602a7553e72411e4d06ff2f337486d02bfecd66df45bce6775c
Provenance
Creator Drury, J, University of Sussex; Neville, F, University of St Andrews; Richardson, D, University College London
Publisher UK Data Service
Publication Year 2019
Funding Reference Economic and Social Research Council
Rights John Drury, University of Sussex. Stephen Reicher, University of St Andrews. Clifford Stott, Keele University. Fergus Neville, University of St Andrews. Daniel Richardson, University College London; The Data Collection is available to any user without the requirement for registration for download/access.
OpenAccess true
Representation
Language English
Resource Type Numeric; Text
Discipline Psychology; Social and Behavioural Sciences
Spatial Coverage London; United Kingdom