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Impact Factor:2.560 | Ranking:Psychology, Social 10 out of 62
Source:2016 Release of Journal Citation Reports with Source: 2015 Web of Science Data

Revisiting the Stanford Prison Experiment: Could Participant Self-Selection Have Led to the Cruelty?

  1. Thomas Carnahan
    1. Western Kentucky University
  1. Sam McFarland
    1. Western Kentucky University, sam.mcfarland{at}wku.edu

Abstract

The authors investigated whether students who selectively volunteer for a study of prison life possess dispositions associated with behaving abusively. Students were recruited for a psychological study of prison life using a virtually identical newspaper ad as used in the Stanford Prison Experiment (SPE; Haney, Banks & Zimbardo, 1973) or for a psychological study, an identical ad minus the words of prison life. Volunteers for the prison study scored significantly higher on measures of the abuse-related dispositions of aggressiveness, authoritarianism, Machiavellianism, narcissism, and social dominance and lower on empathy and altruism, two qualities inversely related to aggressive abuse. Although implications for the SPE remain a matter of conjecture, an interpretation in terms of person-situation interactionism rather than a strict situationist account is indicated by these findings. Implications for interpreting the abusiveness of American military guards at Abu Ghraib Prison also are discussed.

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