The Methodology for Psychology Podcast

The Methodology for Psychology Podcast


Dr. Kevin Binning on “Going along versus getting it right: The role of self-integrity in political conformity.”

March 23, 2015

In today's episode I speak with Dr. Kevin Binning about his article "Going along versus getting it right: The role of self-integrity in political conformity." I have provided the abstract for the article below. Thank you so much for listening, and if you have any questions, please feel free to share them in the comment section below.

Abstract
People often conform to the opinions of ingroup members, even when available evidence suggests that the group is misinformed. Following insights from the social identity approach and self-affirmation theory, it was hypothesized that people conform to salient opinions in an effort to maintain global self-integrity. In a series of experiments examining Americans' approval of President Obama and his policies, approval was consistently swayed by normative information (national polling data) but not by evidentiary information (indicators of national economic health), except under theory-predicted conditions. When participants had satisfied their sense of self-integrity with a self-affirmation exercise (Democrats in Study 1, Republicans in Study 2), or when they had low levels of American identification and thus were less concerned with national norms (Democrats and Republicans in Study 3), they showed the opposite pattern and were swayed by evidence in spite of contradicting normative information. The extent to which people are influenced by norms versus evidence in political judgment is shaped by social identity, one aspect of self-integrity. The results highlight a social psychological means to attenuate and potentially reverse conformity in the face of contradicting evidence, a finding with both practical and theoretical implications.
Other Mentioned Resources

The Political Brain