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{{SocPsy}}
 
{{SocPsy}}
   
'''Social proof''', also known as '''informational social influence''', is a [[psychology|psychological]] phenomenon which occurs in ambiguous social situations when people are unable to determine the appropriate mode of behavior. Making the assumption that surrounding people possess more knowledge about the situation, they will deem the behavior of others as appropriate or more informed.
+
'''Social proof''', also known as '''informational social influence''', is a [[psychology|psychological]] phenomenon where people assume the actions of others in an attempt to reflect correct behavior for a given situation. This effect is prominent in ambiguous social situations where people are unable to determine the appropriate mode of behavior, and is driven by the assumption that surrounding people possess more knowledge about the situation.
   
  +
The effects of social influence can be seen in the tendency of large groups to conform to choices which may be either correct or mistaken, a phenomenon sometimes referred to as [[herd behavior]]. Although social proof reflects a rational motive to take into account the information possessed by others, formal analysis shows that it can cause people to converge too quickly upon a single choice, so that decisions of even large groups of individuals may be grounded in very little information (see [[information cascades]]).
== Applications of Social Proof ==
 
   
  +
Social proof is a type of [[conformity (psychology)|conformity]]. When a person is in a situation where they are unsure of the correct way to behave, they will often look to others for cues concerning the correct behavior. When "we conform because we believe that other's interpretation of an ambiguous situation is more accurate than ours and will help us choose an appropriate course of action,"<ref>Aronson, E., Wilson, T.D., & Akert, A.M. (2005). Social Psychology (5th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.</ref> it is informational social influence. This is contrasted with [[Normative Social Influence|normative social influence]] wherein a person conforms to be liked or accepted by others.
Social value of unfamiliar people is ambiguous and requires a lot of effort to assess accurately. Given limited time and motivation, other people will often evaluate others based on how surrounding people behave towards them. For example, if a man is perceived to be in a company of attractive women, or is associated with them, then his perceived social value and attractiveness will be perceived to be greater. The implied cognition in this case would be "All those girls seem to really like him, there must be something about him that's high value".
 
   
  +
Social proof often leads not just to public [[Compliance (psychology)|compliance]] (conforming to the behavior of others publicly without necessarily believing it is correct) but private acceptance (conforming out of a genuine belief that others are correct).<ref>{{cite journal|last=Kelman|first=H. C.|title=Compliance, identification, and internalization three processes of attitude change|journal=Journal of Conflict Resolution|date=1 March 1958|volume=2|issue=1|pages=51–60|doi=10.1177/002200275800200106}}</ref>
If he is seen to be rejected by many women, his social value will be judged negatively. The implied cognition is then "I just saw him being rejected by many women, there is probably a good reason why they don't like him".
 
  +
Social proof is more powerful when being accurate is more important and when others are perceived as especially knowledgeable.
   
  +
== Mechanisms ==
The concept of "Social Proof" and the [[fundamental attribution error]] can be easily exploited by persuading (or paying) attractive women to display (or at least fake) public interest in a man. Other people will attribute the women's behavior as due to the man's character and are unlikely to consider that they are interested in him due to the actual reasons (external gain).
 
  +
===Multiple source effect===
  +
The multiple source effect occurs when people give more credence to ideas that are stated by multiple sources. This effect can be clearly seen when social proof occurs. For instance, one study observed that people who hear five positive reviews on a book as read by five different synthesized voices perceive that book more favourably than if they hear the same five reviews as read by one synthesized voice.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Lee|first=Kwan Min|title=The Multiple Source Effect and Synthesized Speech.|journal=Human Communication Research|date=1 April 2004|volume=30|issue=2|pages=182–207|doi=10.1111/j.1468-2958.2004.tb00730.x}}</ref>
   
  +
===Uncertainty about the correct conclusion===
Some men use photos of themselves surrounded by attractive women to enhance their perceived social value. The effectiveness of such tactic without support by other consistent behaviors associated with high social value is questionable.
 
  +
Uncertainty is a major factor that encourages the use of social proof. One study found that when evaluating a product, consumers were more likely to incorporate the opinions of others through the use of social proof when their own experiences with the product were ambiguous, leaving uncertainty as to the correct conclusion that they should make.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Wooten|first=D|coauthors=ReedII, A|title=Informational Influence and the Ambiguity of Product Experience: Order Effects on the Weighting of Evidence|journal=Journal of Consumer Psychology|date=1 January 1998|volume=7|issue=1|pages=79–99|doi=10.1207/s15327663jcp0701_04}}</ref>
   
  +
===Similarity to the surrounding group===
Some nightclub and bar owners effectively employ social proof to increase their venue's popularity. This is usually done by deliberately reducing the rate at which people are allowed to enter, thus artificially causing the line to be longer. Uninformed customers might perceive the long line as a signal of the place's desirability and may wait in the line merely because "if all these people are waiting, the place must be good", while in fact the venue is mediocre and nowhere near its full capacity.
 
  +
Similarity also motivates the use of social proof; when a person perceives themselves as similar to the people around them, they are more likely to adopt and perceive as correct the observed behavior of these people. This has been noted in areas such as the use of [[laugh tracks]], where participants will laugh longer and harder when they perceive the people laughing to be similar to themselves.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Platow|first=Michael J.|coauthors=Haslam, S. Alexander, Both, Amanda, Chew, Ivanne, Cuddon, Michelle, Goharpey, Nahal, Maurer, Jacqui, Rosini, Simone, Tsekouras, Anna, Grace, Diana M.|title="It’s not funny if they’re laughing": Self-categorization, social influence, and responses to canned laughter☆|journal=Journal of Experimental Social Psychology|date=1 September 2005|volume=41|issue=5|pages=542–550|doi=10.1016/j.jesp.2004.09.005}}</ref>
   
  +
Social proof is also one of Robert Cialdini's six principles of persuasion, (along with reciprocity, commitment/consistency, authority, liking, and scarcity) which maintains that people are especially likely to perform certain actions if they can relate to the people who performed the same actions before them.<ref name="Cialdini 2001 72–79">{{cite journal|last=Cialdini|first=Robert B.|title=Harnessing the science of persuasion|journal=Harvard Business Review|year=2001|month=October|volume=79|issue=9|pages=72–79|accessdate=2 December 2011}}</ref> One experiment which exemplifies this claim was conducted by researchers who joined a door-to-door charity campaign, who found that if a list of prior donators was longer, the next person solicited was more likely to donate as well. This trend was even more pronounced when the names on the donor list were people that the prospective donor knew, such as friends and neighbors.<ref name="Cialdini 2001 72–79"/> Cialdini's principle also asserts that peer power is effective because people are more likely respond to influence tactics applied horizontally rather than vertically, so people are more likely to be persuaded by a colleague than a superior.<ref name="Cialdini 2001 72–79"/>
Theaters sometimes use specially planted audience members who are instructed to give ovations at pre-arranged times. Usually, these people are the one's who clap initially, and the rest of the audience follows. Such ovations may be perceived by non-expert audience members as signals of the performance's quality.
 
   
  +
== Research ==
Contrary to common annoyance of canned laughter in television shows, television studios have discovered that they can increase the perceived "funniness" of a show by merely playing canned laughter at key "funny" moments. They have found that even though viewers find canned laugher highly annoying, they perceive shows that happen to use canned laughter more funny than the shows that do not use canned laughter.
 
  +
=== Early research ===
  +
The most famous study of social proof is [[Muzafer Sherif|Muzafer Sherif's]] 1935 experiment.<ref>Sherif, M. (1935). A study of some social factors in perception. ''Archives of Psychology, 27''(187)</ref> In this experiment subjects were placed in a dark room and asked to look at a dot of light about 15 feet away. They were then asked how much, in inches, the dot of light was moving. In reality it was not moving at all, but due to the [[autokinetic effect]] it appeared to move. How much the light appears to move varies from person to person but is generally consistent over time for each individual. A few days later a second part of the experiment was conducted. Each subject was paired with two other subjects and asked to give their estimate of how much the light was moving out loud. Even though the subjects had previously given different estimates, the groups would come to a common estimate. To rule out the possibility that the subjects were simply giving the group answer to avoid looking foolish while still believing their original estimate was correct, Sherif had the subjects judge the lights again by themselves after doing so in the group. They maintained the group's judgment. Because the movement of the light is ambiguous the participants were relying on each other to define reality.
   
  +
Another study looked at informational social influence in [[eyewitness identification]]. Subjects were shown a slide of the "perpetrator". They were then shown a slide of a line-up of four men, one of whom was the perpetrator they had seen, and were asked to pick him out. The task was made difficult to the point of ambiguity by presenting the slides very quickly. The task was done in a group that consisted of one actual subject and three confederates (a person acting as a subject but actually working for the experimenter). The confederates answered first and all three gave the same wrong answer. In a high-importance condition of the experiment subjects were told that they were participating in a real test of eyewitness identification ability that would be used by police departments and courts, and their scores would establish the norm for performance. In a low-importance condition subjects were told that the slide task was still being developed and that the experimenters had no idea what the norm for performance was—they were just looking for useful hints to improve the task. It was found that when subjects thought the task was of high importance they were more likely to conform, giving the confederate's wrong answer 51% of the time as opposed to 35% of the time in the low-importance condition.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Baron|first=Robert S.|coauthors=Vandello, Joseph A., Brunsman, Bethany|title=The forgotten variable in conformity research: Impact of task importance on social influence.|journal=Journal of Personality and Social Psychology|date=1 January 1996|volume=71|issue=5|pages=915–927|doi=10.1037/0022-3514.71.5.915}}</ref>
Public blogs are becoming an instance of Social Proof with sometimes an eager following of widely differentiating people.
 
   
  +
===Cultural effects on social proof===
== Social Proof Modifiers ==
 
  +
The strength of social proof also varies across different cultures. For instance, studies have shown that subjects in collectivist cultures conform to others' social proof more often than those in individualist cultures.
  +
<ref>{{cite journal|last=Bond|first=Rod|coauthors=Peter B. Smith|title=Culture and Conformity: A Meta-analysis of Studies Using Asch’s (1952, 1956) Line Judgment Task|journal=Psychological Bulletin|year=1996|volume=119|pages=111–37|doi=10.1037/0033-2909.119.1.111}}</ref> Although this trend seems reoccurring, there is evidence which suggests that these results are a simplification, and that an independent subject's personal individualistic-collectivist tendency also makes an impact upon their decisions.<ref name="Cialdini 1999 1242–1253">{{cite journal|last=Cialdini|first=Robert B.|coauthors=Wosinska, W., Barett, D. W., & Gornik-Durose, M.|title=Compliance with a request in two cultures: The differential influence of social proof and commitment/consistency on collectivists and individualists|journal=Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin|year=1999|month=October|volume=25|issue=10|pages=1242–1253|doi=10.1177/0146167299258006}}</ref> Additional variables, such as the subject's sense of social responsibility, need to be taken into account to better understand the mechanisms of social proof across cultures; for example, more collectivist individuals will often have an increased compulsion to help others because of their prominent awareness of social responsibility, and this in turn will increase the likelihood they will comply to requests, regardless of their peers' previous decisions.<ref name="Cialdini 1999 1242–1253"/>
   
  +
=== Copycat suicides ===
'''Identification of the surrounding group with self'''<br />
 
  +
{{Further2|[[Copycat suicide#Social proof model|Copycat suicide]]}}
If the group people who are performing a certain behavior are perceived to belong to the same or similar group, then one is more likely to conform to the groups behavior than if one does not identify with the group.
 
  +
Social proof has been proposed as an explanation for [[Copycat suicide]], where suicide rates increase following media publication about suicides.<ref name="influence" /> One study using [[agent-based modeling]] showed that copycat suicides are more likely when there are similarities between the person involved in the publicized suicide and the potential copycats.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Mesoudi|first=Alex|coauthors=Jones, James Holland|title=The Cultural Dynamics of Copycat Suicide|journal=PLoS ONE|date=NaN undefined NaN|volume=4|issue=9|pages=e7252|doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0007252}}</ref> In addition, research performed by David Phillips between 1947 to 1968 further supports the existence of copycat suicides.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Frei|first=Andreas|last=Schenker|first=Tanja|last=Dittmann|first=Volker|last=Kraeuchi|first=Kurt|last=Hoffmann-Richter|first=Ulrike|title=The Werther Effect and Assisted Suicide|journal=Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior|date=Summer 2003|volume=33|issue=2|pages=192–200|doi=10.1521/suli.33.2.192.22768}}</ref>
   
  +
== Examples ==
'''Possession of special knowledge''' <br />
 
  +
===In family interactions===
  +
A son coming to his mother complaining about his running shoes, saying, “Mom, I need those new running shoes. The ones I have now make me look so uncool!” The mother responds by telling her son that he doesn’t need the new running shoes, no matter how cool they make him look. However, when the same mother sees that two of her friends have recently bought the same piece of furniture, she may buy one too. Although she didn’t care about her son’s conformity since she doesn’t care about his [[peer group]], she cares about her own.<ref>Wilkie, H. (2006). Influence through scarcity and social proof. Administrative Assistant's Update, (11917881), 4-5. Retrieved from http://ezproxy.qa.proquest.com/docview/225227301?accountid=14771</ref>
  +
  +
===In employment===
  +
Similarly, a person who has been [[unemployed]] for a long time may have a hard time finding a new job - even if they are highly skilled and qualified. Potential employers attribute wrongly the person's lack of employment to the person rather than the situation. This causes the potential employers to search more intensively for flaws or other negative characteristics that are "congruent" with or explain the person's failure and to discount the applicant's virtues.
  +
  +
Similarly, a person who is in high demand - for example a [[CEO]] - may continue to get
  +
many attractive job offers and can as a result extract a considerable wage premium -
  +
even if his/her objective performance has been poor. When people appear successful,
  +
potential employers and others who evaluate them tend to search more intensively for virtues
  +
or positive characteristics that are "congruent" with or explain the person's success, and
  +
to ignore or underestimate the person's faults. People who experience positive social proof
  +
may also benefit from a [[halo effect]]. Other attributes are deemed to be more positive
  +
than they actually are. Additionally, the person's attributes may be viewed with
  +
a positive [[Framing effect (psychology)|framing]] bias. For example, a person might be viewed as arrogant if
  +
they have negative social proof, and bold if they have positive social proof.
  +
  +
For these reasons, social proof is important in determining a potential employer's
  +
[[consideration set]]. Social proof naturally also applies to products and is used
  +
extensively in marketing and sales. Situations that violate social proof can cause
  +
[[cognitive dissonance]], and can cause people to have a sense of loss of control or
  +
failure of the "[[just world hypothesis]]".
  +
  +
===In entertainment===
 
Theaters sometimes use [[Claque|specially planted audience members]] who are instructed to give ovations at pre-arranged times. Usually, these people are the ones who clap initially, and the rest of the audience follows. Such ovations may be perceived by non-expert audience members as signals of the performance's quality.
  +
 
Contrary to common annoyance of [[laugh track|canned laughter]] in television shows, television studios have discovered that they can increase the perceived "funniness" of a show by merely playing canned laughter at key "funny" moments. They have found that even though viewers find canned laughter highly annoying, they perceive shows that happen to use canned laughter more funny than the shows that do not use canned laughter.<ref name="influence">{{cite book|last=Cialdini|first=Robert|authorlink=Robert Cialdini|title=Influence|year=1993|publisher=HarperCollins|location=New York|edition=3rd}}</ref>
  +
 
== Modifiers ==
 
===Possession of special knowledge===
 
If one perceives that s/he is better advised about a situation than the surrounding group, then s/he is less likely to follow the group's behavior.
 
If one perceives that s/he is better advised about a situation than the surrounding group, then s/he is less likely to follow the group's behavior.
   
'''Identification with Authority''' <br />
+
===Identification with authority===
 
If one perceives themselves as a relevant authority figure in the situation, they are less likely to follow the surrounding group's behavior. This is a combination of "Identification of the surrounding group with self" and "Possession of special knowledge". People in authority positions tend to place themselves in different categories than other people and usually they have special training or knowledge that allows them to conclude that they are better informed than the surrounding group.
 
If one perceives themselves as a relevant authority figure in the situation, they are less likely to follow the surrounding group's behavior. This is a combination of "Identification of the surrounding group with self" and "Possession of special knowledge". People in authority positions tend to place themselves in different categories than other people and usually they have special training or knowledge that allows them to conclude that they are better informed than the surrounding group.
  +
  +
==="Smart money"===
  +
One might perceive particular groups of others, identified by their behavior or other characteristics, to be more reliable guides to the situation than the average person. One might think truck drivers to be more frequent, and therefore more experienced drivers than others, and therefore weigh more heavily the number of trucks than the number of cars parked when judging the quality of a restaurant. One might identify the movement of betting odds or securities prices at certain times as revealing the preferences of "smart money" -- those more likely to be in the know.
  +
  +
== See also ==
  +
* [[Bandwagon effect]]
  +
* [[Bystander effect]]
  +
* [[Critical mass (sociodynamics)]]
 
* [[Crowd psychology]]
  +
* [[Information cascades]]
  +
* [[Observational learning]]
  +
* [[Peer pressure]]
  +
* [[Shill]]
  +
* [[Social influence]]
  +
* [[The Third Wave]]
  +
* [[Tipping point (sociology)]]
  +
* [[When in Rome]]
   
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
  +
{{Reflist}}
Cialdini, R. (1993) Influence: Science and practice (3rd edn), New York: HarperCollins
 
   
  +
{{Conformity}}
[[Category:Social psychology]]
 
   
  +
[[Category:Conformity]]
  +
[[Category:Human behavior]]
  +
[[Category:Persuasion]]
  +
[[Category:Social psychology]]
   
{{psychology-stub}}
 
 
{{enWP|Social proof}}
 
{{enWP|Social proof}}

Revision as of 23:21, 14 May 2013

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Social proof, also known as informational social influence, is a psychological phenomenon where people assume the actions of others in an attempt to reflect correct behavior for a given situation. This effect is prominent in ambiguous social situations where people are unable to determine the appropriate mode of behavior, and is driven by the assumption that surrounding people possess more knowledge about the situation.

The effects of social influence can be seen in the tendency of large groups to conform to choices which may be either correct or mistaken, a phenomenon sometimes referred to as herd behavior. Although social proof reflects a rational motive to take into account the information possessed by others, formal analysis shows that it can cause people to converge too quickly upon a single choice, so that decisions of even large groups of individuals may be grounded in very little information (see information cascades).

Social proof is a type of conformity. When a person is in a situation where they are unsure of the correct way to behave, they will often look to others for cues concerning the correct behavior. When "we conform because we believe that other's interpretation of an ambiguous situation is more accurate than ours and will help us choose an appropriate course of action,"[1] it is informational social influence. This is contrasted with normative social influence wherein a person conforms to be liked or accepted by others.

Social proof often leads not just to public compliance (conforming to the behavior of others publicly without necessarily believing it is correct) but private acceptance (conforming out of a genuine belief that others are correct).[2] Social proof is more powerful when being accurate is more important and when others are perceived as especially knowledgeable.

Mechanisms

Multiple source effect

The multiple source effect occurs when people give more credence to ideas that are stated by multiple sources. This effect can be clearly seen when social proof occurs. For instance, one study observed that people who hear five positive reviews on a book as read by five different synthesized voices perceive that book more favourably than if they hear the same five reviews as read by one synthesized voice.[3]

Uncertainty about the correct conclusion

Uncertainty is a major factor that encourages the use of social proof. One study found that when evaluating a product, consumers were more likely to incorporate the opinions of others through the use of social proof when their own experiences with the product were ambiguous, leaving uncertainty as to the correct conclusion that they should make.[4]

Similarity to the surrounding group

Similarity also motivates the use of social proof; when a person perceives themselves as similar to the people around them, they are more likely to adopt and perceive as correct the observed behavior of these people. This has been noted in areas such as the use of laugh tracks, where participants will laugh longer and harder when they perceive the people laughing to be similar to themselves.[5]

Social proof is also one of Robert Cialdini's six principles of persuasion, (along with reciprocity, commitment/consistency, authority, liking, and scarcity) which maintains that people are especially likely to perform certain actions if they can relate to the people who performed the same actions before them.[6] One experiment which exemplifies this claim was conducted by researchers who joined a door-to-door charity campaign, who found that if a list of prior donators was longer, the next person solicited was more likely to donate as well. This trend was even more pronounced when the names on the donor list were people that the prospective donor knew, such as friends and neighbors.[6] Cialdini's principle also asserts that peer power is effective because people are more likely respond to influence tactics applied horizontally rather than vertically, so people are more likely to be persuaded by a colleague than a superior.[6]

Research

Early research

The most famous study of social proof is Muzafer Sherif's 1935 experiment.[7] In this experiment subjects were placed in a dark room and asked to look at a dot of light about 15 feet away. They were then asked how much, in inches, the dot of light was moving. In reality it was not moving at all, but due to the autokinetic effect it appeared to move. How much the light appears to move varies from person to person but is generally consistent over time for each individual. A few days later a second part of the experiment was conducted. Each subject was paired with two other subjects and asked to give their estimate of how much the light was moving out loud. Even though the subjects had previously given different estimates, the groups would come to a common estimate. To rule out the possibility that the subjects were simply giving the group answer to avoid looking foolish while still believing their original estimate was correct, Sherif had the subjects judge the lights again by themselves after doing so in the group. They maintained the group's judgment. Because the movement of the light is ambiguous the participants were relying on each other to define reality.

Another study looked at informational social influence in eyewitness identification. Subjects were shown a slide of the "perpetrator". They were then shown a slide of a line-up of four men, one of whom was the perpetrator they had seen, and were asked to pick him out. The task was made difficult to the point of ambiguity by presenting the slides very quickly. The task was done in a group that consisted of one actual subject and three confederates (a person acting as a subject but actually working for the experimenter). The confederates answered first and all three gave the same wrong answer. In a high-importance condition of the experiment subjects were told that they were participating in a real test of eyewitness identification ability that would be used by police departments and courts, and their scores would establish the norm for performance. In a low-importance condition subjects were told that the slide task was still being developed and that the experimenters had no idea what the norm for performance was—they were just looking for useful hints to improve the task. It was found that when subjects thought the task was of high importance they were more likely to conform, giving the confederate's wrong answer 51% of the time as opposed to 35% of the time in the low-importance condition.[8]

Cultural effects on social proof

The strength of social proof also varies across different cultures. For instance, studies have shown that subjects in collectivist cultures conform to others' social proof more often than those in individualist cultures. [9] Although this trend seems reoccurring, there is evidence which suggests that these results are a simplification, and that an independent subject's personal individualistic-collectivist tendency also makes an impact upon their decisions.[10] Additional variables, such as the subject's sense of social responsibility, need to be taken into account to better understand the mechanisms of social proof across cultures; for example, more collectivist individuals will often have an increased compulsion to help others because of their prominent awareness of social responsibility, and this in turn will increase the likelihood they will comply to requests, regardless of their peers' previous decisions.[10]

Copycat suicides

includeonly>

Social proof has been proposed as an explanation for Copycat suicide, where suicide rates increase following media publication about suicides.[11] One study using agent-based modeling showed that copycat suicides are more likely when there are similarities between the person involved in the publicized suicide and the potential copycats.[12] In addition, research performed by David Phillips between 1947 to 1968 further supports the existence of copycat suicides.[13]

Examples

In family interactions

A son coming to his mother complaining about his running shoes, saying, “Mom, I need those new running shoes. The ones I have now make me look so uncool!” The mother responds by telling her son that he doesn’t need the new running shoes, no matter how cool they make him look. However, when the same mother sees that two of her friends have recently bought the same piece of furniture, she may buy one too. Although she didn’t care about her son’s conformity since she doesn’t care about his peer group, she cares about her own.[14]

In employment

Similarly, a person who has been unemployed for a long time may have a hard time finding a new job - even if they are highly skilled and qualified. Potential employers attribute wrongly the person's lack of employment to the person rather than the situation. This causes the potential employers to search more intensively for flaws or other negative characteristics that are "congruent" with or explain the person's failure and to discount the applicant's virtues.

Similarly, a person who is in high demand - for example a CEO - may continue to get many attractive job offers and can as a result extract a considerable wage premium - even if his/her objective performance has been poor. When people appear successful, potential employers and others who evaluate them tend to search more intensively for virtues or positive characteristics that are "congruent" with or explain the person's success, and to ignore or underestimate the person's faults. People who experience positive social proof may also benefit from a halo effect. Other attributes are deemed to be more positive than they actually are. Additionally, the person's attributes may be viewed with a positive framing bias. For example, a person might be viewed as arrogant if they have negative social proof, and bold if they have positive social proof.

For these reasons, social proof is important in determining a potential employer's consideration set. Social proof naturally also applies to products and is used extensively in marketing and sales. Situations that violate social proof can cause cognitive dissonance, and can cause people to have a sense of loss of control or failure of the "just world hypothesis".

In entertainment

Theaters sometimes use specially planted audience members who are instructed to give ovations at pre-arranged times. Usually, these people are the ones who clap initially, and the rest of the audience follows. Such ovations may be perceived by non-expert audience members as signals of the performance's quality.

Contrary to common annoyance of canned laughter in television shows, television studios have discovered that they can increase the perceived "funniness" of a show by merely playing canned laughter at key "funny" moments. They have found that even though viewers find canned laughter highly annoying, they perceive shows that happen to use canned laughter more funny than the shows that do not use canned laughter.[11]

Modifiers

Possession of special knowledge

If one perceives that s/he is better advised about a situation than the surrounding group, then s/he is less likely to follow the group's behavior.

Identification with authority

If one perceives themselves as a relevant authority figure in the situation, they are less likely to follow the surrounding group's behavior. This is a combination of "Identification of the surrounding group with self" and "Possession of special knowledge". People in authority positions tend to place themselves in different categories than other people and usually they have special training or knowledge that allows them to conclude that they are better informed than the surrounding group.

"Smart money"

One might perceive particular groups of others, identified by their behavior or other characteristics, to be more reliable guides to the situation than the average person. One might think truck drivers to be more frequent, and therefore more experienced drivers than others, and therefore weigh more heavily the number of trucks than the number of cars parked when judging the quality of a restaurant. One might identify the movement of betting odds or securities prices at certain times as revealing the preferences of "smart money" -- those more likely to be in the know.

See also

References

  1. Aronson, E., Wilson, T.D., & Akert, A.M. (2005). Social Psychology (5th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
  2. Kelman, H. C. (1 March 1958). Compliance, identification, and internalization three processes of attitude change. Journal of Conflict Resolution 2 (1): 51–60.
  3. Lee, Kwan Min (1 April 2004). The Multiple Source Effect and Synthesized Speech.. Human Communication Research 30 (2): 182–207.
  4. Wooten, D, ReedII, A (1 January 1998). Informational Influence and the Ambiguity of Product Experience: Order Effects on the Weighting of Evidence. Journal of Consumer Psychology 7 (1): 79–99.
  5. Platow, Michael J., Haslam, S. Alexander, Both, Amanda, Chew, Ivanne, Cuddon, Michelle, Goharpey, Nahal, Maurer, Jacqui, Rosini, Simone, Tsekouras, Anna, Grace, Diana M. (1 September 2005). "It’s not funny if they’re laughing": Self-categorization, social influence, and responses to canned laughter☆. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 41 (5): 542–550.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Cialdini, Robert B. (October 2001). Harnessing the science of persuasion. Harvard Business Review 79 (9): 72–79.
  7. Sherif, M. (1935). A study of some social factors in perception. Archives of Psychology, 27(187)
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