Stanford Prison Experiment Essay

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    The purpose of this experiment was to make a breakthrough study of the human response to imprisonment, in specific, to the real world condition of prison life. In social psychology, this is known as “mundane realism”; which refers to the ability to imitate the real world as much as possible, which is exactly what this study did. There were twenty-four people who were selected to do this experiment. These subjects were randomly assigned to play the role as “prisoner”

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    were ordinary men prior to the Holocaust. Philip Zimbardo wanted to study how this phenomenon could occur, so he created the Stanford Prison Experiment. The Stanford Prison Experiment was conducted in 1971 to study the effect of prisoner and guard roles on human behavior. Twenty-four participants were randomly split into the two groups. Prior to the beginning of the experiment, the men in both groups were essentially the same in terms of behavior. After only a few hours, guards became ruthless towards

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    Introduction The Stanford Prison Experiment is a film directed by  Kyle Patrick Alvarez in 2015. The movie is based on a real-life psychology experiment conducted at California's Stanford University in August 1971. There are 75 volunteers were willing to join the experiment and 24 volunteers were picked after the interview. Because Dr Zimbardo and his team wanted to have the most normal and healthy people. All the participants were assigned as prisoners or guards, half prisoner and half guard. And

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    Stanford Prison Experiment The Stanford Prison Experiment was one of the most criticized human nature experiments in history. In the experiment Dr. Zimbardo wanted to see if people would think for themselves, or fall into predefined roles that they were given. Before the experiment took place, Dr. Zimbardo picked 24 male subjects he thought were mentally and emotionally stable. He also built a mock prison in the basement of Stanford University. During this process all the subjects were divided in

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    Stanford Prison Experiment Summary of the milestone The Stanford prison experiment (SPE) was study organized by Philip George Zimbardo who was a professor at Stanford University. Basically, SPE was a study of psychological effect. He studied about how personality and environment of a person effect his behaviour. Experiment he performed was based on prison and life of guards. He wants to find out whether personality get innovated in person according to given environment (situational) or due to their

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    The Stanford Prison Experiment is known as one of the most infamous social experiments in the study of psychology. Conducted by Stanford professor Phillip G. Zimbardo, the experiment was a prison simulation using male college students that volunteered. Zimbardo’s experiment was designed to strip prisoners of their individuality and freedom and put them in a place where they were powerless against people with whom they would be equal in the outside world (Shuttleworth, Martyn). The intent of his experiment

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    Stanford Prison Experiment According to our text book, an experiment is a “carefully designed situation in which the researcher studies the impact of certain variables on a subjects’ attitude or behavior” (Kendall, 2012:55). An experiment can be tested by using a theory and research cycle. The theory and research cycle is a tool used to determine all aspects of social living. The cycle can be filtered into two different categories: a deductive or inductive science. Deductive science beings with

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    known as The Stanford Prison experiment; it was the study of the physical effects of becoming the person and person guard. This experiment was conducted in the Stanford University on August 14, 1971, by a team of researcher led by psychological professor Philip Zimbardo using college students. The main purpose of this whole study was to understand the development of the effect of roles of rebel and social expectations in stimulated prison environment. Professor Zimbardo then set an experiment by making

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    as well as moral efficacy once applied to guards in submerging circumstances, which resulted to more than slight complications, causing difficulty in proceeding with the experiment. Studies have uncovered that people had obeyed authority figures whether it meant acting in opposition of their own moral certitude. The Stanford Prison has changed the perspective of those who occupy knowledge of the scenario, better classified as a psychological experimentation. Investigating the purity of human beings

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    After viewing the video clip and reading the text on the Stanford Prison Experiment, I think this study is one of the most memorable studies in social psychology because of the effect the role playing had on the students who volunteered to participate in the study on obedience to authority. Students, who were once able to come and go as they pleased, had their movement restricted by being arrested and placed in a simulated prison on a college campus. During the growing confusion between reality and

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