Full Text
Zimbardo Prison Experiment
Markus Kemmelmeier
Subject
Psychology
Sociology
»
Social Psychology
Place
Northern America
»
United States of America
Period
1000 - 1999
»
1900-1999
People
Zimbardo, Philip
Key-Topics
power
DOI: 10.1111/b.9781405124331.2007.x
Extract
Social psychologist Phillip Zimbardo (b. 1933) conducted a well-known prison study known as the Stanford Prison Experiment. Funded by the US Navy to investigate conflict in military prisons, Zimbardo and his graduate students, Craig Haney and W. Curtis Banks, rejected the idea that the personality characteristics of prisoners and guards in the prison system were primarily responsible for conflicts as they occurred in the prison system. Broadly consistent with Goffman's (1961) concept of a total institution, Zimbardo and his team identified individual anonymity and loss of identity as the most prominent characteristics of prisons, which Zimbardo's (1970) deindividuation theory linked to antisocial behavior. Without room for individual identities, Zimbardo and colleagues reasoned that the social roles of prisoner and guard would be the dominant influence on behavior and allow participants to behave in ways that would otherwise be unimaginable to them. Zimbardo and his team of researchers used newspaper ads to recruit volunteers to participate in a two-week-long “prison simulation” in exchange for payment of $15 per day. From 75 applicants, researchers selected 24 young men, predominantly white and middle class (21 active participants and 3 alternates), whom pretests showed to be healthy, normal, and well adjusted. Through the toss of a coin, participants were randomly assigned ... log in or subscribe to read full text
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