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Demonstrating the Power of Social Situations via a Simulated …
2004年6月8日 · The lessons of the Stanford Prison Experiment have gone well beyond the classroom (Haney & Zimbardo, 1998). Zimbardo was invited to give testimony to a Congressional Committee investigating the causes of prison riots (Zimbardo, 1971), and to a Senate Judiciary Committee on crime and prisons focused on detention of juveniles (Zimbardo, 1974).
2019年6月4日 · l’expérience de Stanford (Le Texier, 2018). However, his book is presently only available in French. Hence, we used Le Texier’s (2019) paper, “Debunking the Stanford prison experiment,” which is currently in press in American Psy-chologist and details his archival research and findings, as the source for our study. Le Texier provided ...
Philip Zimbardo on heroism, shyness and the Stanford Prison …
Philip Zimbardo, PhD, is one of the most recognizable names in the field of psychology. In this episode, Zimbardo discusses recent criticism of his controversial 1971 Stanford Prison Experiment as well as his other work on time, shyness, men and heroism.
How Can the Science of Human Behavior Help Us Understand Abu …
The Stanford prison experiment taught us important lessons about the potential for prisoner abuse, even at the hands of ordinary and stable guards. It demonstrated, once again, the power of the situation. Yet, the experiment also showed that some of the guards were more abusive than others. Chalk one up for personality and individual differences.
Craig Haney advocates for criminal justice reform
2021年4月19日 · Stanford Prison Experiment While at Stanford, in 1971, Haney studied a death penalty case in New Jersey involving a man whose mother contended that her son's confession had been psychologically coerced. Haney was given access to records and interviewed lawyers who'd been involved, and he visited the convicted man at the New Jersey state prison ...
Psychologists add caveat to ‘blind conformity’ research
Haslam and Reicher conducted a version of the Stanford Prison Experiment televised by the British Broadcasting Service in 2002, showing that participants didn't automatically conform to their assigned roles and only acted in line with group membership if they identified with the group. They're conducting other related studies now, as well.
Social psychology on the silver screen
"The Stanford Prison Experiment" debuted at the annual Sundance Film Festival for independent and documentary films, held Jan. 22–Feb. 1 in Park City, Utah. The film won the Alfred P. Sloan Feature Film Prize, a $20,000 award presented by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation to honor a movie about science.
What makes good people do bad things?
Prison abuses. The same social psychological processes--deindividualization, anonymity of place, dehumanization, role-playing and social modeling, moral disengagement and group conformity--that acted in the Stanford Prison Experiment were at play at Abu Ghraib, Zimbardo argued. So is it a few bad apples that spoil a barrel?
Psychological science offers clues to Iraqi prisoner abuse
In 1971, Philip G. Zimbardo, PhD, conducted a simulated jail study known as the Stanford Prison Experiment. Mirroring the Abu Ghraib situation, the Stanford guards--who had no apparent prior psychological problems --became brutal and abusive toward prisoners.
Zimbardo re-examines his landmark Stanford prison study
Thinking back, Philip G. Zimbardo, PhD, believes his historic Stanford Prison Experiment was born out of his tendency to multitask. "The way I dealt with having to teach so much was a kind of intellectual cheating," said Zimbardo. "I had to use teaching ideas to generate research ideas and then use research to feed back into teaching."