Publication | Closed Access
The psychology of social impact.
2.8K
Citations
16
References
1981
Year
Group PhenomenonSocial PsychologySocial InfluenceCollective BehaviorSocial SciencesPsychologySocietal InfluenceMarginal EffectConformitySocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesSocial EnvironmentSocial ImpactApplied Social PsychologySocial Identity TheoryInterpersonal CommunicationProsocial BehaviorSocial BehaviorSociologySocial Im- PactCrowd PsychologyOther People
The author proposes a theory of social im- pact specifying the effect of other persons on an in- dividual. According to the theory, when other people are the source of impact and the individual is the target, impact should be a multiplicative function of the strength, immediacy, and number of other people. Fur- thermore, impact should take the form of a power func- tion, with the marginal effect of the Nth other person being less than that of the (N — l)th. Finally, when other people stand with the individual as the target of forces from outside the group, impact should be divided such that the resultant is an inverse power function of the strength, immediacy, and number of persons stand- ing together. The author reviews relevant evidence from research on conformity and imitation, stage fright and embarrassment, news interest, bystander interven- tion, tipping, inquiring for Christ, productivity in groups, and crowding in rats. He also discusses the unresolved issues and desirable characteristics of the theory.
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