Which line is longer: A, B, or C? The answer is obvious. But if everyone else says the wrong answer, will you go along with the crowd? Solomon Asch proved that 75% of people willβat least once.
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π¬ The Setup
Task: Match line lengths (obviously easy)
Group: 7-9 people (only 1 real participant, rest are actors)
Procedure:
- Everyone states answer out loud
- Actors give wrong answer (unanimously)
- Real participant answers last
The question: Will they trust their eyes or conform to the group?
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π± Results
Conformity rate:
- 75% conformed at least once
- 32% conformed on average across trials
- 25% never conformed (independent thinkers)
Why people conformed:
- “I thought I was wrong”
- “I didn’t want to stand out”
- “Maybe they saw something I didn’t”
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π‘ Factors That Increased Conformity
Group size:
- 1 confederate: 3% conformity
- 3 confederates: 32% conformity
- 15 confederates: No further increase
Unanimity:
- All wrong: 32% conformity
- One ally (correct answer): 5% conformity
Difficulty:
- Easy task: Lower conformity
- Ambiguous task: Higher conformity
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π Real-World Applications
Explains:
- Fashion trends
- Political polarization
- Groupthink in corporations
- Peer pressure
- Social media echo chambers
The danger: Conformity can lead to bad decisions when the group is wrong.
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The Asch Experiment: proof that humans are social animals who fear standing out!