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Group dynamics

Group dynamics is a system of behaviors and psychological processes occurring within a social group (intragroup dynamics), or between social groups (intergroup dynamics). The study of group dynamics can be useful in understanding decision-making behaviour, tracking the spread of diseases in society, creating effective therapy techniques, and following the emergence and popularity of new ideas and technologies.[1] These applications of the field are studied in psychology, sociology, anthropology, political science, epidemiology, education, social work, leadership studies, business and managerial studies, as well as communication studies.

History

The history of group dynamics (or group processes)[2] has a consistent, underlying premise: 'the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.' A social group is an entity that has qualities which cannot be understood just by studying the individuals that make up the group. In 1924, Gestalt psychologist Max Wertheimer proposed ‘There are entities where the behaviour of the whole cannot be derived from its individual elements nor from the way these elements fit together; rather the opposite is true: the properties of any of the parts are determined by the intrinsic structural laws of the whole’ (Wertheimer 1924, p. 7).[3] (The proposition remains questionable[by whom?], since modern biologists and game theorists do look to explain the 'structural laws of the whole' in terms of 'the way the elements fit together'.[citation needed])

As a field of study, group dynamics has roots in both psychology and sociology. Wilhelm Wundt (1832–1920), credited as the founder of experimental psychology, had a particular interest in the psychology of communities, which he believed possessed phenomena (human language, customs, and religion) that could not be described through a study of the individual.[2] On the sociological side, Émile Durkheim (1858–1917), who was influenced by Wundt, also recognized collective phenomena, such as public knowledge. Other key theorists include Gustave Le Bon (1841–1931) who believed that crowds possessed a 'racial unconscious' with primitive, aggressive, and antisocial instincts, and William McDougall (psychologist), who believed in a 'group mind,' which had a distinct existence born from the interaction of individuals.[2] (The concept of a collective consciousness is not essential to group dynamics.[citation needed])

Eventually, the social psychologist Kurt Lewin (1890–1947) coined the term group dynamics to describe the positive and negative forces within groups of people.[4] In 1945, he established The Group Dynamics Research Center at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the first institute devoted explicitly to the study of group dynamics.[5] Throughout his career, Lewin was focused on how the study of group dynamics could be applied to real-world, social issues.

Increasingly, research has applied evolutionary psychology principles to group dynamics. As humans social environments became more complex, they acquired adaptations by way of group dynamics that enhance survival. Examples include mechanisms for dealing with status, reciprocity, identifying cheaters, ostracism, altruism, group decision, leadership, and intergroup relations.[6] Also, a combination of evolution and game theory has been[when?] used to explain the development and maintenance of cooperative behavior between individuals in a group.[citation needed]

Key theorists

Gustave Le Bon

Gustave Le Bon was a French social psychologist whose seminal study, The Crowd: A Study of the Popular Mind (1896) led to the development of group psychology.

William McDougall

The British psychologist William McDougall in his work The Group Mind (1920) researched the dynamics of groups of various sizes and degrees of organization.

Sigmund Freud

In Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego, (1922), Sigmund Freud based his preliminary description of group psychology on Le Bon's work, but went on to develop his own, original theory, related to what he had begun to elaborate in Totem and Taboo. Theodor Adorno reprised Freud's essay in 1951 with his Freudian Theory and the Pattern of Fascist Propaganda, and said that "It is not an overstatement if we say that Freud, though he was hardly interested in the political phase of the problem, clearly foresaw the rise and nature of fascist mass movements in purely psychological categories."[7]

Jacob L. Moreno

Jacob L. Moreno was a psychiatrist, dramatist, philosopher and theoretician who coined the term "group psychotherapy" in the early 1930s and was highly influential at the time.

Kurt Lewin

Kurt Lewin (1943, 1948, 1951) is commonly identified as the founder of the movement to study groups scientifically. He coined the term group dynamics to describe the way groups and individuals act and react to changing circumstances.[8]

William Schutz

William Schutz (1958, 1966) looked at interpersonal relations as stage-developmental, inclusion (am I included?), control (who is top dog here?), and affection (do I belong here?). Schutz sees groups resolving each issue in turn in order to be able to progress to the next stage.

Conversely, a struggling group can devolve to an earlier stage, if unable to resolve outstanding issues at its present stage. Schutz referred to these group dynamics as "the interpersonal underworld," group processes which are largely unseen and un-acknowledged, as opposed to "content" issues, which are nominally the agenda of group meetings.[9][10]

Wilfred Bion

Wilfred Bion (1961) studied group dynamics from a psychoanalytic perspective, and stated that he was much influenced by Wilfred Trotter for whom he worked at University College Hospital London, as did another key figure in the Psychoanalytic movement, Ernest Jones. He discovered several mass group processes which involved the group as a whole adopting an orientation which, in his opinion, interfered with the ability of a group to accomplish the work it was nominally engaged in.[11] Bion's experiences are reported in his published books, especially Experiences in Groups. The Tavistock Institute has further developed and applied the theory and practices developed by Bion.

Bruce Tuckman

Bruce Tuckman (1965) proposed the four-stage model called Tuckman's Stages for a group. Tuckman's model states that the ideal group decision-making process should occur in four stages:

  • Forming (pretending to get on or get along with others)
  • Storming (letting down the politeness barrier and trying to get down to the issues even if tempers flare up)
  • Norming (getting used to each other and developing trust and productivity)
  • Performing (working in a group to a common goal on a highly efficient and cooperative basis)

Tuckman later added a fifth stage for the dissolution of a group called adjourning. (Adjourning may also be referred to as mourning, i.e. mourning the adjournment of the group). This model refers to the overall pattern of the group, but of course individuals within a group work in different ways. If distrust persists, a group may never even get to the norming stage.

M. Scott Peck

M. Scott Peck developed stages for larger-scale groups (i.e., communities) which are similar to Tuckman's stages of group development.[12] Peck describes the stages of a community as:

  • Pseudo-community
  • Chaos
  • Emptiness
  • True Community

Communities may be distinguished from other types of groups, in Peck's view, by the need for members to eliminate barriers to communication in order to be able to form true community. Examples of common barriers are: expectations and preconceptions; prejudices; ideology, counterproductive norms, theology and solutions; the need to heal, convert, fix or solve and the need to control. A community is born when its members reach a stage of "emptiness" or peace.

Richard Hackman

Richard Hackman developed a synthetic, research-based model for designing and managing work groups. Hackman suggested that groups are successful when they satisfy internal and external clients, develop capabilities to perform in the future, and when members find meaning and satisfaction in the group. Hackman proposed five conditions that increase the chance that groups will be successful.[13] These include:

  1. Being a real team: which results from having a shared task, clear boundaries which clarify who is inside or outside of the group, and stability in group membership.
  2. Compelling direction: which results from a clear, challenging, and consequential goal.
  3. Enabling structure: which results from having tasks which have variety, a group size that is not too large, talented group members who have at least moderate social skill, and strong norms that specify appropriate behaviour.
  4. Supportive context: which occurs in groups nested in larger groups (e.g. companies). In companies, supportive contexts involves a) reward systems that reward performance and cooperation (e.g. group based rewards linked to group performance), b) an educational system that develops member skills, c) an information and materials system that provides the needed information and raw materials (e.g. computers).
  5. Expert coaching: which occurs on the rare occasions when group members feel they need help with task or interpersonal issues. Hackman emphasizes that many team leaders are overbearing and undermine group effectiveness.

Intragroup dynamics

Intragroup dynamics (also referred to as ingroup-, within-group, or commonly just ‘group dynamics’) are the underlying processes that give rise to a set of norms, roles, relations, and common goals that characterize a particular social group. Examples of groups include religious, political, military, and environmental groups, sports teams, work groups, and therapy groups. Amongst the members of a group, there is a state of interdependence, through which the behaviours, attitudes, opinions, and experiences of each member are collectively influenced by the other group members.[14] In many fields of research, there is an interest in understanding how group dynamics influence individual behaviour, attitudes, and opinions.

The dynamics of a particular group depend on how one defines the boundaries of the group. Often, there are distinct subgroups within a more broadly defined group. For example, one could define U.S. residents (‘Americans’) as a group, but could also define a more specific set of U.S. residents (for example, 'Americans in the South'). For each of these groups, there are distinct dynamics that can be discussed. Notably, on this very broad level, the study of group dynamics is similar to the study of culture. For example, there are group dynamics in the U.S. South that sustain a culture of honor, which is associated with norms of toughness, honour-related violence, and self-defence.[15][16]

Group formation

Group formation starts with a psychological bond between individuals. The social cohesion approach suggests that group formation comes out of bonds of interpersonal attraction.[2] In contrast, the social identity approach suggests that a group starts when a collection of individuals perceive that they share some social category (‘smokers’, ‘nurses,’ ‘students,’ ‘hockey players’), and that interpersonal attraction only secondarily enhances the connection between individuals.[2] Additionally, from the social identity approach, group formation involves both identifying with some individuals and explicitly not identifying with others. So to say, a level of psychological distinctiveness is necessary for group formation. Through interaction, individuals begin to develop group norms, roles, and attitudes which define the group, and are internalized to influence behaviour.[17]

Emergent groups arise from a relatively spontaneous process of group formation. For example, in response to a natural disaster, an emergent response group may form. These groups are characterized as having no preexisting structure (e.g. group membership, allocated roles) or prior experience working together.[18] Yet, these groups still express high levels of interdependence and coordinate knowledge, resources, and tasks.[18]

Joining groups

Joining a group is determined by a number of different factors, including an individual's personal traits;[19] gender;[20] social motives such as need for affiliation,[21] need for power,[22] and need for intimacy;[23] attachment style;[24] and prior group experiences.[25] Groups can offer some advantages to its members that would not be possible if an individual decided to remain alone, including gaining social support in the forms of emotional support,[26] instrumental support,[27] and informational support.[27] It also offers friendship, potential new interests, learning new skills, and enhancing self esteem.[28] However, joining a group may also cost an individual time, effort, and personal resources as they may conform to social pressures and strive to reap the benefits that may be offered by the group.[28]

The Minimax Principle is a part of social exchange theory that states that people will join and remain in a group that can provide them with the maximum amount of valuable rewards while at the same time, ensuring the minimum amount of costs to themselves.[29] However, this does not necessarily mean that a person will join a group simply because the reward/cost ratio seems attractive. According to Howard Kelley and John Thibaut, a group may be attractive to us in terms of costs and benefits, but that attractiveness alone does not determine whether or not we will join the group. Instead, our decision is based on two factors: our comparison level, and our comparison level for alternatives.[29]

In John Thibaut and Harold Kelley's social exchange theory, comparison level is the standard by which an individual will evaluate the desirability of becoming a member of the group and forming new social relationships within the group.[29] This comparison level is influenced by previous relationships and membership in different groups. Those individuals who have experienced positive rewards with few costs in previous relationships and groups will have a higher comparison level than a person who experienced more negative costs and fewer rewards in previous relationships and group memberships. According to the social exchange theory, group membership will be more satisfying to a new prospective member if the group's outcomes, in terms of costs and rewards, are above the individual's comparison level. As well, group membership will be unsatisfying to a new member if the outcomes are below the individual's comparison level.[29]

Comparison level only predicts how satisfied a new member will be with the social relationships within the group.[30] To determine whether people will actually join or leave a group, the value of other, alternative groups needs to be taken into account.[30] This is called the comparison level for alternatives. This comparison level for alternatives is the standard by which an individual will evaluate the quality of the group in comparison to other groups the individual has the opportunity to join. Thiabaut and Kelley stated that the "comparison level for alternatives can be defined informally as the lowest level of outcomes a member will accept in the light of available alternative opportunities.”[31]

Joining and leaving groups is ultimately dependent on the comparison level for alternatives, whereas member satisfaction within a group depends on the comparison level.[30] To summarize, if membership in the group is above the comparison level for alternatives and above the comparison level, the membership within the group will be satisfying and an individual will be more likely to join the group. If membership in the group is above the comparison level for alternatives but below the comparison level, membership will be not be satisfactory; however, the individual will likely join the group since no other desirable options are available. When group membership is below the comparison level for alternatives but above the comparison level, membership is satisfying but an individual will be unlikely to join. If group membership is below both the comparison and alternative comparison levels, membership will be dissatisfying and the individual will be less likely to join the group.

Types of groups

Groups can vary drastically from one another. For example, three best friends who interact every day as well as a collection of people watching a movie in a theater both constitute a group. Past research has identified four basic types of groups which include, but are not limited to: primary groups, social groups, collective groups, and categories.[30] It is important to define these four types of groups because they are intuitive to most lay people. For example, in an experiment,[32] participants were asked to sort a number of groups into categories based on their own criteria. Examples of groups to be sorted were a sports team, a family, people at a bus stop and women. It was found that participants consistently sorted groups into four categories: intimacy groups, task groups, loose associations, and social categories. These categories are conceptually similar to the four basic types to be discussed. Therefore, it seems that individuals intuitively define aggregations of individuals in this way.

Primary groups

Primary groups are characterized by relatively small, long-lasting groups of individuals who share personally meaningful relationships. Since these groups often interact face-to-face, they know each other very well and are unified. Individuals that are a part of primary groups consider the group to be an important part of their lives. Consequently, members strongly identify with their group, even without regular meetings.[30] Cooley[33] believed that primary groups were essential for integrating individuals into their society since this is often their first experience with a group. For example, individuals are born into a primary group, their family, which creates a foundation for them to base their future relationships. Individuals can be born into a primary group; however, primary groups can also form when individuals interact for extended periods of time in meaningful ways.[30] Examples of primary groups include family, close friends, and gangs.

Social groups

A social group is characterized by a formally organized group of individuals who are not as emotionally involved with each other as those in a primary group. These groups tend to be larger, with shorter memberships compared to primary groups.[30] Further, social groups do not have as stable memberships, since members are able to leave their social group and join new groups. The goals of social groups are often task-oriented as opposed to relationship-oriented.[30] Examples of social groups include coworkers, clubs, and sports teams.

Collectives

Collectives are characterized by large groups of individuals who display similar actions or outlooks. They are loosely formed, spontaneous, and brief.[30] Examples of collectives include a flash mob, an audience at a movie, and a crowd watching a building burn.

Categories

Categories are characterized by a collection of individuals who are similar in some way.[30] Categories become groups when their similarities have social implications. For example, when people treat others differently because of certain aspects of their appearance or heritage, for example, this creates groups of different races.[30] For this reason, categories can appear to be higher in entitativity and essentialism than primary, social, and collective groups. Entitativity is defined by Campbell[34] as the extent to which collections of individuals are perceived to be a group. The degree of entitativity that a group has is influenced by whether a collection of individuals experience the same fate, display similarities, and are close in proximity. If individuals believe that a group is high in entitativity, then they are likely to believe that the group has unchanging characteristics that are essential to the group, known as essentialism.[35] Examples of categories are New Yorkers, gamblers, and women.

Group membership and social identity

The social group is a critical source of information about individual identity.[36] We naturally make comparisons between our own group and other groups, but we do not necessarily make objective comparisons. Instead, we make evaluations that are self-enhancing, emphasizing the positive qualities of our own group (see ingroup bias).[2] In this way, these comparisons give us a distinct and valued social identity that benefits our self-esteem. Our social identity and group membership also satisfies a need to belong.[37] Of course, individuals belong to multiple groups. Therefore, one's social identity can have several, qualitatively distinct parts (for example, one's ethnic identity, religious identity, and political identity).[38]

Optimal distinctiveness theory suggests that individuals have a desire to be similar to others, but also a desire to differentiate themselves, ultimately seeking some balance of these two desires (to obtain optimal distinctiveness).[39] For example, one might imagine a young teenager in the United States who tries to balance these desires, not wanting to be ‘just like everyone else,’ but also wanting to ‘fit in’ and be similar to others. One's collective self may offer a balance between these two desires.[2] That is, to be similar to others (those who you share group membership with), but also to be different from others (those who are outside of your group).

Group cohesion

In the social sciences, group cohesion refers to the processes that keep members of a social group connected.[4] Terms such as attraction, solidarity, and morale are often used to describe group cohesion.[4] It is thought to be one of the most important characteristics of a group, and has been linked to group performance,[40] intergroup conflict[41] and therapeutic change.[42]

Group cohesion, as a scientifically studied property of groups, is commonly associated with Kurt Lewin and his student, Leon Festinger. Lewin defined group cohesion as the willingness of individuals to stick together, and believed that without cohesiveness a group could not exist.[4] As an extension of Lewin's work, Festinger (along with Stanley Schachter and Kurt Back) described cohesion as, “the total field of forces which act on members to remain in the group” (Festinger, Schachter, & Back, 1950, p. 37).[4] Later, this definition was modified to describe the forces acting on individual members to remain in the group, termed attraction to the group.[4] Since then, several models for understanding the concept of group cohesion have been developed, including Albert Carron's hierarchical model[43] and several bi-dimensional models (vertical v. horizontal cohesion, task v. social cohesion, belongingness and morale, and personal v. social attraction). Before Lewin and Festinger, there were, of course, descriptions of a very similar group property. For example, Emile Durkheim described two forms of solidarity (mechanical and organic), which created a sense of collective conscious and an emotion-based sense of community.[44]

Black sheep effect

Beliefs within the ingroup are based on how individuals in the group see their other members. Individuals tend to upgrade likeable in-group members and deviate from unlikeable group members, making them a separate outgroup. This is called the black sheep effect.[45] The way a person judges socially desirable and socially undesirable individuals depends upon whether they are part of the ingroup or outgroup.

This phenomenon has been later accounted for by subjective group dynamics theory.[46] According to this theory, people derogate socially undesirable (deviant) ingroup members relative to outgroup members, because they give a bad image of the ingroup and jeopardize people's social identity.

In more recent studies, Marques and colleagues[47] have shown that this occurs more strongly with regard to ingroup full members than other members. Whereas new members of a group must prove themselves to the full members to become accepted, full members have undergone socialization and are already accepted within the group. They have more privilege than newcomers but more responsibility to help the group achieve its goals. Marginal members were once full members but lost membership because they failed to live up to the group's expectations. They can rejoin the group if they go through re-socialization. Therefore, full members' behavior is paramount to define the ingroup's image.

Bogart and Ryan surveyed the development of new members' stereotypes about in-groups and out-groups during socialization. Results showed that the new members judged themselves as consistent with the stereotypes of their in-groups, even when they had recently committed to join those groups or existed as marginal members. They also tended to judge the group as a whole in an increasingly less positive manner after they became full members.[48] However, there is no evidence that this affects the way they are judged by other members. Nevertheless, depending on the self-esteem of an individual, members of the in-group may experience different private beliefs about the group's activities but will publicly express the opposite—that they actually share these beliefs. One member may not personally agree with something the group does, but to avoid the black sheep effect, they will publicly agree with the group and keep the private beliefs to themselves. If the person is privately self-aware, he or she is more likely to comply with the group even if they possibly have their own beliefs about the situation.[49]

In situations of hazing within fraternities and sororities on college campuses, pledges may encounter this type of situation and may outwardly comply with the tasks they are forced to do regardless of their personal feelings about the Greek institution they are joining. This is done in an effort to avoid becoming an outcast of the group.[48] Outcasts who behave in a way that might jeopardize the group tend to be treated more harshly than the likeable ones in a group, creating a black sheep effect. Full members of a fraternity might treat the incoming new members harshly, causing the pledges to decide if they approve of the situation and if they will voice their disagreeing opinions about it.

Group influence on individual behaviour

Individual behaviour is influenced by the presence of others.[36] For example, studies have found that individuals work harder and faster when others are present (see social facilitation), and that an individual's performance is reduced when others in the situation create distraction or conflict.[36] Groups also influence individual's decision-making processes. These include decisions related to ingroup bias, persuasion (see Asch conformity experiments), obedience (see Milgram Experiment), and groupthink. There are both positive and negative implications of group influence on individual behaviour. This type of influence is often useful in the context of work settings, team sports, and political activism. However, the influence of groups on the individual can also generate extremely negative behaviours, evident in Nazi Germany, the My Lai Massacre, and in the Abu Ghraib prison (also see Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse).[50]

Group structure

A group's structure is the internal framework that defines members' relations to one another over time.[51] Frequently studied elements of group structure include roles, norms, values, communication patterns, and status differentials.[52] Group structure has also been defined as the underlying pattern of roles, norms, and networks of relations among members that define and organize the group.[53]

Roles can be defined as a tendency to behave, contribute and interrelate with others in a particular way. Roles may be assigned formally, but more often are defined through the process of role differentiation.[54] Role differentiation is the degree to which different group members have specialized functions. A group with a high level of role differentiation would be categorized as having many different roles that are specialized and narrowly defined.[53] A key role in a group is the leader, but there are other important roles as well, including task roles, relationship roles, and individual roles.[53] Functional (task) roles are generally defined in relation to the tasks the team is expected to perform.[55] Individuals engaged in task roles focus on the goals of the group and on enabling the work that members do; examples of task roles include coordinator, recorder, critic, or technician.[53] A group member engaged in a relationship role (or socioemotional role) is focused on maintaining the interpersonal and emotional needs of the groups' members; examples of relationship role include encourager, harmonizer, or compromiser.[53]

Norms are the informal rules that groups adopt to regulate members' behaviour. Norms refer to what should be done and represent value judgments about appropriate behaviour in social situations. Although they are infrequently written down or even discussed, norms have powerful influence on group behaviour.[56][unreliable source?] They are a fundamental aspect of group structure as they provide direction and motivation, and organize the social interactions of members.[53] Norms are said to be emergent, as they develop gradually throughout interactions between group members.[53] While many norms are widespread throughout society, groups may develop their own norms that members must learn when they join the group. There are various types of norms, including: prescriptive, proscriptive, descriptive, and injunctive.[53]

  • Prescriptive Norms: the socially appropriate way to respond in a social situation, or what group members are supposed to do (e.g. saying thank you after someone does a favour for you)
  • Proscriptive Norms: actions that group members should not do; prohibitive (e.g. not belching in public)
  • Descriptive Norms: describe what people usually do (e.g. clapping after a speech)
  • Injunctive Norms: describe behaviours that people ought to do; more evaluative in nature than a descriptive norm

Intermember Relations are the connections among the members of a group, or the social network within a group. Group members are linked to one another at varying levels. Examining the intermember relations of a group can highlight a group's density (how many members are linked to one another), or the degree centrality of members (number of ties between members).[53] Analysing the intermember relations aspect of a group can highlight the degree centrality of each member in the group, which can lead to a better understanding of the roles of certain group (e.g. an individual who is a 'go-between' in a group will have closer ties to numerous group members which can aid in communication, etc.).[53]

Values are goals or ideas that serve as guiding principles for the group.[57] Like norms, values may be communicated either explicitly or on an ad hoc basis. Values can serve as a rallying point for the team. However, some values (such as conformity) can also be dysfunction and lead to poor decisions by the team.

Communication patterns describe the flow of information within the group and they are typically described as either centralized or decentralized. With a centralized pattern, communications tend to flow from one source to all group members. Centralized communications allow standardization of information, but may restrict the free flow of information. Decentralized communications make it easy to share information directly between group members. When decentralized, communications tend to flow more freely, but the delivery of information may not be as fast or accurate as with centralized communications. Another potential downside of decentralized communications is the sheer volume of information that can be generated, particularly with electronic media.

Status differentials are the relative differences in status among group members. When a group is first formed the members may all be on an equal level, but over time certain members may acquire status and authority within the group; this can create what is known as a pecking order within a group.[53] Status can be determined by a variety of factors and characteristics, including specific status characteristics (e.g. task-specific behavioural and personal characteristics, such as experience) or diffuse status characteristics (e.g. age, race, ethnicity).[53] It is important that other group members perceive an individual's status to be warranted and deserved, as otherwise they may not have authority within the group.[53] Status differentials may affect the relative amount of pay among group members and they may also affect the group's tolerance to violation of group norms (e.g. people with higher status may be given more freedom to violate group norms).

Group performance

Forsyth suggests that while many daily tasks undertaken by individuals could be performed in isolation, the preference is to perform with other people.[53]

Social facilitation and performance gains

In a study of dynamogenic stimulation for the purpose of explaining pacemaking and competition in 1898, Norman Triplett theorized that "the bodily presence of another rider is a stimulus to the racer in arousing the competitive instinct...".[58] This dynamogenic factor is believed to have laid the groundwork for what is now known as social facilitation—an "improvement in task performance that occurs when people work in the presence of other people".[53]

Further to Triplett's observation, in 1920, Floyd Allport found that although people in groups were more productive than individuals, the quality of their product/effort was inferior.[53]

In 1965, Robert Zajonc expanded the study of arousal response (originated by Triplett) with further research in the area of social facilitation. In his study, Zajonc considered two experimental paradigms. In the first—audience effects—Zajonc observed behaviour in the presence of passive spectators, and the second—co-action effects—he examined behaviour in the presence of another individual engaged in the same activity.[59]

Zajonc observed two categories of behaviours—dominant responses to tasks that are easier to learn and which dominate other potential responses and nondominant responses to tasks that are less likely to be performed. In his Theory of Social Facilitation, Zajonc concluded that in the presence of others, when action is required, depending on the task requirement, either social facilitation or social interference will impact the outcome of the task. If social facilitation occurs, the task will have required a dominant response from the individual resulting in better performance in the presence of others, whereas if social interference occurs the task will have elicited a nondominant response from the individual resulting in subpar performance of the task.[53]

Several theories analysing performance gains in groups via drive, motivational, cognitive and personality processes, explain why social facilitation occurs.

Zajonc hypothesized that compresence (the state of responding in the presence of others) elevates an individual's drive level which in turn triggers social facilitation when tasks are simple and easy to execute, but impedes performance when tasks are challenging.[53]

Nickolas Cottrell, 1972, proposed the evaluation apprehension model whereby he suggested people associate social situations with an evaluative process. Cottrell argued this situation is met with apprehension and it is this motivational response, not arousal/elevated drive, that is responsible for increased productivity on simple tasks and decreased productivity on complex tasks in the presence of others.[53]

In The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life (1959), Erving Goffman assumes that individuals can control how they are perceived by others. He suggests that people fear being perceived as having negative, undesirable qualities and characteristics by other people, and that it is this fear that compels individuals to portray a positive self-presentation/social image of themselves. In relation to performance gains, Goffman's self-presentation theory predicts, in situations where they may be evaluated, individuals will consequently increase their efforts in order to project/preserve/maintain a positive image.[53]

Distraction-conflict theory contends that when a person is working in the presence of other people, an interference effect occurs splitting the individual's attention between the task and the other person. On simple tasks, where the individual is not challenged by the task, the interference effect is negligible and performance, therefore, is facilitated. On more complex tasks, where drive is not strong enough to effectively compete against the effects of distraction, there is no performance gain. The Stroop task (Stroop effect) demonstrated that, by narrowing a person's focus of attention on certain tasks, distractions can improve performance.[53]

Social orientation theory considers the way a person approaches social situations. It predicts that self-confident individuals with a positive outlook will show performance gains through social facilitation, whereas a self-conscious individual approaching social situations with apprehension is less likely to perform well due to social interference effects.[53]

Intergroup dynamics

Intergroup dynamics (or intergroup relations) refers to the behavioural and psychological relationship between two or more groups. This includes perceptions, attitudes, opinions, and behaviours towards one's own group, as well as those towards another group. In some cases, intergroup dynamics is prosocial, positive, and beneficial (for example, when multiple research teams work together to accomplish a task or goal). In other cases, intergroup dynamics can create conflict. For example, Fischer & Ferlie found initially positive dynamics between a clinical institution and its external authorities dramatically changed to a 'hot' and intractable conflict when authorities interfered with its embedded clinical model.[60] Similarly, underlying the 1999 Columbine High School shooting in Littleton, Colorado, United States, intergroup dynamics played a significant role in Eric Harris’ and Dylan Klebold’s decision to kill a teacher and 14 students (including themselves).[50]

Intergroup conflict

According to social identity theory, intergroup conflict starts with a process of comparison between individuals in one group (the ingroup) to those of another group (the outgroup).[61] This comparison process is not unbiased and objective. Instead, it is a mechanism for enhancing one's self-esteem.[2] In the process of such comparisons, an individual tends to:

  • favour the ingroup over the outgroup
  • exaggerate and overgeneralize the differences between the ingroup and the outgroup (to enhance group distinctiveness)
  • minimize the perception of differences between ingroup members
  • remember more detailed and positive information about the ingroup, and more negative information about the outgroup[62]

Even without any intergroup interaction (as in the minimal group paradigm), individuals begin to show favouritism towards their own group, and negative reactions towards the outgroup.[62] This conflict can result in prejudice, stereotypes, and discrimination. Intergroup conflict can be highly competitive, especially for social groups with a long history of conflict (for example, the 1994 Rwandan genocide, rooted in group conflict between the ethnic Hutu and Tutsi).[2] In contrast, intergroup competition can sometimes be relatively harmless, particularly in situations where there is little history of conflict (for example, between students of different universities) leading to relatively harmless generalizations and mild competitive behaviours.[2] Intergroup conflict is commonly recognized amidst racial, ethnic, religious, and political groups.

The formation of intergroup conflict was investigated in a popular series of studies by Muzafer Sherif and colleagues in 1961, called the Robbers Cave Experiment.[63] The Robbers Cave Experiment was later used to support realistic conflict theory.[64] Other prominent theories relating to intergroup conflict include social dominance theory, and social-/self-categorization theory.

Intergroup conflict reduction

There have been several strategies developed for reducing the tension, bias, prejudice, and conflict between social groups. These include the contact hypothesis, the jigsaw classroom, and several categorization-based strategies.

Contact hypothesis (intergroup contact theory)

In 1954, Gordon Allport suggested that by promoting contact between groups, prejudice can be reduced.[65] Further, he suggested four optimal conditions for contact: equal status between the groups in the situation; common goals; intergroup cooperation; and the support of authorities, law, or customs.[66] Since then, over 500 studies have been done on prejudice reduction under variations of the contact hypothesis, and a meta-analytic review suggests overall support for its efficacy.[66] In some cases, even without the four optimal conditions outlined by Allport, prejudice between groups can be reduced.[66]

Superordinate identities

Under the contact hypothesis, several models have been developed. A number of these models utilize a superordinate identity to reduce prejudice. That is, a more broadly defined, ‘umbrella’ group/identity that includes the groups that are in conflict. By emphasizing this superordinate identity, individuals in both subgroups can share a common social identity.[67] For example, if there is conflict between White, Black, and Latino students in a high school, one might try to emphasize the ‘high school’ group/identity that students share to reduce conflict between the groups. Models utilizing superordinate identities include the common ingroup identity model, the ingroup projection model, the mutual intergroup differentiation model, and the ingroup identity model.[67] Similarly, "recategorization" is a broader term used by Gaertner et al. to describe the strategies aforementioned.[62]

Interdependence

There are also techniques for reducing prejudice that utilize interdependence between two or more groups. That is, members across groups have to rely on one another to accomplish some goal or task. In the Robbers Cave Experiment, Sherif used this strategy to reduce conflict between groups.[62] Elliot Aronson’s Jigsaw Classroom also uses this strategy of interdependence.[68] In 1971, thick racial tensions were abounding in Austin, Texas. Aronson was brought in to examine the nature of this tension within schools, and to devise a strategy for reducing it (so to improve the process of school integration, mandated under Brown v. Board of Education in 1954). Despite strong evidence for the effectiveness of the jigsaw classroom, the strategy was not widely used (arguably because of strong attitudes existing outside of the schools, which still resisted the notion that racial and ethnic minority groups are equal to Whites and, similarly, should be integrated into schools).

Selected academic journals

See also

References

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group, dynamics, system, behaviors, psychological, processes, occurring, within, social, group, intragroup, dynamics, between, social, groups, intergroup, dynamics, study, group, dynamics, useful, understanding, decision, making, behaviour, tracking, spread, d. Group dynamics is a system of behaviors and psychological processes occurring within a social group intragroup dynamics or between social groups intergroup dynamics The study of group dynamics can be useful in understanding decision making behaviour tracking the spread of diseases in society creating effective therapy techniques and following the emergence and popularity of new ideas and technologies 1 These applications of the field are studied in psychology sociology anthropology political science epidemiology education social work leadership studies business and managerial studies as well as communication studies Contents 1 History 2 Key theorists 2 1 Gustave Le Bon 2 2 William McDougall 2 3 Sigmund Freud 2 4 Jacob L Moreno 2 5 Kurt Lewin 2 6 William Schutz 2 7 Wilfred Bion 2 8 Bruce Tuckman 2 9 M Scott Peck 2 10 Richard Hackman 3 Intragroup dynamics 3 1 Group formation 3 2 Joining groups 3 3 Types of groups 3 3 1 Primary groups 3 3 2 Social groups 3 3 3 Collectives 3 3 4 Categories 3 4 Group membership and social identity 3 5 Group cohesion 3 6 Black sheep effect 3 7 Group influence on individual behaviour 3 8 Group structure 3 9 Group performance 3 9 1 Social facilitation and performance gains 4 Intergroup dynamics 4 1 Intergroup conflict 4 2 Intergroup conflict reduction 4 2 1 Contact hypothesis intergroup contact theory 4 2 2 Superordinate identities 4 2 3 Interdependence 5 Selected academic journals 6 See also 7 ReferencesHistory EditThe history of group dynamics or group processes 2 has a consistent underlying premise the whole is greater than the sum of its parts A social group is an entity that has qualities which cannot be understood just by studying the individuals that make up the group In 1924 Gestalt psychologist Max Wertheimer proposed There are entities where the behaviour of the whole cannot be derived from its individual elements nor from the way these elements fit together rather the opposite is true the properties of any of the parts are determined by the intrinsic structural laws of the whole Wertheimer 1924 p 7 3 The proposition remains questionable by whom since modern biologists and game theorists do look to explain the structural laws of the whole in terms of the way the elements fit together citation needed As a field of study group dynamics has roots in both psychology and sociology Wilhelm Wundt 1832 1920 credited as the founder of experimental psychology had a particular interest in the psychology of communities which he believed possessed phenomena human language customs and religion that could not be described through a study of the individual 2 On the sociological side Emile Durkheim 1858 1917 who was influenced by Wundt also recognized collective phenomena such as public knowledge Other key theorists include Gustave Le Bon 1841 1931 who believed that crowds possessed a racial unconscious with primitive aggressive and antisocial instincts and William McDougall psychologist who believed in a group mind which had a distinct existence born from the interaction of individuals 2 The concept of a collective consciousness is not essential to group dynamics citation needed Eventually the social psychologist Kurt Lewin 1890 1947 coined the term group dynamics to describe the positive and negative forces within groups of people 4 In 1945 he established The Group Dynamics Research Center at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology the first institute devoted explicitly to the study of group dynamics 5 Throughout his career Lewin was focused on how the study of group dynamics could be applied to real world social issues Increasingly research has applied evolutionary psychology principles to group dynamics As humans social environments became more complex they acquired adaptations by way of group dynamics that enhance survival Examples include mechanisms for dealing with status reciprocity identifying cheaters ostracism altruism group decision leadership and intergroup relations 6 Also a combination of evolution and game theory has been when used to explain the development and maintenance of cooperative behavior between individuals in a group citation needed Key theorists EditGustave Le Bon Edit Main articles Gustave Le Bon and The Crowd A Study of the Popular Mind Gustave Le Bon was a French social psychologist whose seminal study The Crowd A Study of the Popular Mind 1896 led to the development of group psychology William McDougall Edit Main article William McDougall psychologist The British psychologist William McDougall in his work The Group Mind 1920 researched the dynamics of groups of various sizes and degrees of organization Sigmund Freud Edit Main article Sigmund Freud In Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego 1922 Sigmund Freud based his preliminary description of group psychology on Le Bon s work but went on to develop his own original theory related to what he had begun to elaborate in Totem and Taboo Theodor Adorno reprised Freud s essay in 1951 with his Freudian Theory and the Pattern of Fascist Propaganda and said that It is not an overstatement if we say that Freud though he was hardly interested in the political phase of the problem clearly foresaw the rise and nature of fascist mass movements in purely psychological categories 7 Jacob L Moreno Edit Main article Jacob L Moreno Jacob L Moreno was a psychiatrist dramatist philosopher and theoretician who coined the term group psychotherapy in the early 1930s and was highly influential at the time Kurt Lewin Edit Main article Kurt Lewin Kurt Lewin 1943 1948 1951 is commonly identified as the founder of the movement to study groups scientifically He coined the term group dynamics to describe the way groups and individuals act and react to changing circumstances 8 William Schutz Edit Main article William Schutz William Schutz 1958 1966 looked at interpersonal relations as stage developmental inclusion am I included control who is top dog here and affection do I belong here Schutz sees groups resolving each issue in turn in order to be able to progress to the next stage Conversely a struggling group can devolve to an earlier stage if unable to resolve outstanding issues at its present stage Schutz referred to these group dynamics as the interpersonal underworld group processes which are largely unseen and un acknowledged as opposed to content issues which are nominally the agenda of group meetings 9 10 Wilfred Bion Edit Main article Wilfred Bion Wilfred Bion 1961 studied group dynamics from a psychoanalytic perspective and stated that he was much influenced by Wilfred Trotter for whom he worked at University College Hospital London as did another key figure in the Psychoanalytic movement Ernest Jones He discovered several mass group processes which involved the group as a whole adopting an orientation which in his opinion interfered with the ability of a group to accomplish the work it was nominally engaged in 11 Bion s experiences are reported in his published books especially Experiences in Groups The Tavistock Institute has further developed and applied the theory and practices developed by Bion Bruce Tuckman Edit Main article Bruce Tuckman Bruce Tuckman 1965 proposed the four stage model called Tuckman s Stages for a group Tuckman s model states that the ideal group decision making process should occur in four stages Forming pretending to get on or get along with others Storming letting down the politeness barrier and trying to get down to the issues even if tempers flare up Norming getting used to each other and developing trust and productivity Performing working in a group to a common goal on a highly efficient and cooperative basis Tuckman later added a fifth stage for the dissolution of a group called adjourning Adjourning may also be referred to as mourning i e mourning the adjournment of the group This model refers to the overall pattern of the group but of course individuals within a group work in different ways If distrust persists a group may never even get to the norming stage M Scott Peck Edit Main article M Scott Peck M Scott Peck developed stages for larger scale groups i e communities which are similar to Tuckman s stages of group development 12 Peck describes the stages of a community as Pseudo community Chaos Emptiness True CommunityCommunities may be distinguished from other types of groups in Peck s view by the need for members to eliminate barriers to communication in order to be able to form true community Examples of common barriers are expectations and preconceptions prejudices ideology counterproductive norms theology and solutions the need to heal convert fix or solve and the need to control A community is born when its members reach a stage of emptiness or peace Richard Hackman Edit Richard Hackman developed a synthetic research based model for designing and managing work groups Hackman suggested that groups are successful when they satisfy internal and external clients develop capabilities to perform in the future and when members find meaning and satisfaction in the group Hackman proposed five conditions that increase the chance that groups will be successful 13 These include Being a real team which results from having a shared task clear boundaries which clarify who is inside or outside of the group and stability in group membership Compelling direction which results from a clear challenging and consequential goal Enabling structure which results from having tasks which have variety a group size that is not too large talented group members who have at least moderate social skill and strong norms that specify appropriate behaviour Supportive context which occurs in groups nested in larger groups e g companies In companies supportive contexts involves a reward systems that reward performance and cooperation e g group based rewards linked to group performance b an educational system that develops member skills c an information and materials system that provides the needed information and raw materials e g computers Expert coaching which occurs on the rare occasions when group members feel they need help with task or interpersonal issues Hackman emphasizes that many team leaders are overbearing and undermine group effectiveness Intragroup dynamics EditIntragroup dynamics also referred to as ingroup within group or commonly just group dynamics are the underlying processes that give rise to a set of norms roles relations and common goals that characterize a particular social group Examples of groups include religious political military and environmental groups sports teams work groups and therapy groups Amongst the members of a group there is a state of interdependence through which the behaviours attitudes opinions and experiences of each member are collectively influenced by the other group members 14 In many fields of research there is an interest in understanding how group dynamics influence individual behaviour attitudes and opinions The dynamics of a particular group depend on how one defines the boundaries of the group Often there are distinct subgroups within a more broadly defined group For example one could define U S residents Americans as a group but could also define a more specific set of U S residents for example Americans in the South For each of these groups there are distinct dynamics that can be discussed Notably on this very broad level the study of group dynamics is similar to the study of culture For example there are group dynamics in the U S South that sustain a culture of honor which is associated with norms of toughness honour related violence and self defence 15 16 Group formation Edit Group formation starts with a psychological bond between individuals The social cohesion approach suggests that group formation comes out of bonds of interpersonal attraction 2 In contrast the social identity approach suggests that a group starts when a collection of individuals perceive that they share some social category smokers nurses students hockey players and that interpersonal attraction only secondarily enhances the connection between individuals 2 Additionally from the social identity approach group formation involves both identifying with some individuals and explicitly not identifying with others So to say a level of psychological distinctiveness is necessary for group formation Through interaction individuals begin to develop group norms roles and attitudes which define the group and are internalized to influence behaviour 17 Emergent groups arise from a relatively spontaneous process of group formation For example in response to a natural disaster an emergent response group may form These groups are characterized as having no preexisting structure e g group membership allocated roles or prior experience working together 18 Yet these groups still express high levels of interdependence and coordinate knowledge resources and tasks 18 Joining groups Edit Joining a group is determined by a number of different factors including an individual s personal traits 19 gender 20 social motives such as need for affiliation 21 need for power 22 and need for intimacy 23 attachment style 24 and prior group experiences 25 Groups can offer some advantages to its members that would not be possible if an individual decided to remain alone including gaining social support in the forms of emotional support 26 instrumental support 27 and informational support 27 It also offers friendship potential new interests learning new skills and enhancing self esteem 28 However joining a group may also cost an individual time effort and personal resources as they may conform to social pressures and strive to reap the benefits that may be offered by the group 28 The Minimax Principle is a part of social exchange theory that states that people will join and remain in a group that can provide them with the maximum amount of valuable rewards while at the same time ensuring the minimum amount of costs to themselves 29 However this does not necessarily mean that a person will join a group simply because the reward cost ratio seems attractive According to Howard Kelley and John Thibaut a group may be attractive to us in terms of costs and benefits but that attractiveness alone does not determine whether or not we will join the group Instead our decision is based on two factors our comparison level and our comparison level for alternatives 29 In John Thibaut and Harold Kelley s social exchange theory comparison level is the standard by which an individual will evaluate the desirability of becoming a member of the group and forming new social relationships within the group 29 This comparison level is influenced by previous relationships and membership in different groups Those individuals who have experienced positive rewards with few costs in previous relationships and groups will have a higher comparison level than a person who experienced more negative costs and fewer rewards in previous relationships and group memberships According to the social exchange theory group membership will be more satisfying to a new prospective member if the group s outcomes in terms of costs and rewards are above the individual s comparison level As well group membership will be unsatisfying to a new member if the outcomes are below the individual s comparison level 29 Comparison level only predicts how satisfied a new member will be with the social relationships within the group 30 To determine whether people will actually join or leave a group the value of other alternative groups needs to be taken into account 30 This is called the comparison level for alternatives This comparison level for alternatives is the standard by which an individual will evaluate the quality of the group in comparison to other groups the individual has the opportunity to join Thiabaut and Kelley stated that the comparison level for alternatives can be defined informally as the lowest level of outcomes a member will accept in the light of available alternative opportunities 31 Joining and leaving groups is ultimately dependent on the comparison level for alternatives whereas member satisfaction within a group depends on the comparison level 30 To summarize if membership in the group is above the comparison level for alternatives and above the comparison level the membership within the group will be satisfying and an individual will be more likely to join the group If membership in the group is above the comparison level for alternatives but below the comparison level membership will be not be satisfactory however the individual will likely join the group since no other desirable options are available When group membership is below the comparison level for alternatives but above the comparison level membership is satisfying but an individual will be unlikely to join If group membership is below both the comparison and alternative comparison levels membership will be dissatisfying and the individual will be less likely to join the group Types of groups Edit Main article Types of social groups Groups can vary drastically from one another For example three best friends who interact every day as well as a collection of people watching a movie in a theater both constitute a group Past research has identified four basic types of groups which include but are not limited to primary groups social groups collective groups and categories 30 It is important to define these four types of groups because they are intuitive to most lay people For example in an experiment 32 participants were asked to sort a number of groups into categories based on their own criteria Examples of groups to be sorted were a sports team a family people at a bus stop and women It was found that participants consistently sorted groups into four categories intimacy groups task groups loose associations and social categories These categories are conceptually similar to the four basic types to be discussed Therefore it seems that individuals intuitively define aggregations of individuals in this way Primary groups Edit Primary groups are characterized by relatively small long lasting groups of individuals who share personally meaningful relationships Since these groups often interact face to face they know each other very well and are unified Individuals that are a part of primary groups consider the group to be an important part of their lives Consequently members strongly identify with their group even without regular meetings 30 Cooley 33 believed that primary groups were essential for integrating individuals into their society since this is often their first experience with a group For example individuals are born into a primary group their family which creates a foundation for them to base their future relationships Individuals can be born into a primary group however primary groups can also form when individuals interact for extended periods of time in meaningful ways 30 Examples of primary groups include family close friends and gangs Social groups Edit A social group is characterized by a formally organized group of individuals who are not as emotionally involved with each other as those in a primary group These groups tend to be larger with shorter memberships compared to primary groups 30 Further social groups do not have as stable memberships since members are able to leave their social group and join new groups The goals of social groups are often task oriented as opposed to relationship oriented 30 Examples of social groups include coworkers clubs and sports teams Collectives Edit Collectives are characterized by large groups of individuals who display similar actions or outlooks They are loosely formed spontaneous and brief 30 Examples of collectives include a flash mob an audience at a movie and a crowd watching a building burn Categories Edit Categories are characterized by a collection of individuals who are similar in some way 30 Categories become groups when their similarities have social implications For example when people treat others differently because of certain aspects of their appearance or heritage for example this creates groups of different races 30 For this reason categories can appear to be higher in entitativity and essentialism than primary social and collective groups Entitativity is defined by Campbell 34 as the extent to which collections of individuals are perceived to be a group The degree of entitativity that a group has is influenced by whether a collection of individuals experience the same fate display similarities and are close in proximity If individuals believe that a group is high in entitativity then they are likely to believe that the group has unchanging characteristics that are essential to the group known as essentialism 35 Examples of categories are New Yorkers gamblers and women Group membership and social identity Edit The social group is a critical source of information about individual identity 36 We naturally make comparisons between our own group and other groups but we do not necessarily make objective comparisons Instead we make evaluations that are self enhancing emphasizing the positive qualities of our own group see ingroup bias 2 In this way these comparisons give us a distinct and valued social identity that benefits our self esteem Our social identity and group membership also satisfies a need to belong 37 Of course individuals belong to multiple groups Therefore one s social identity can have several qualitatively distinct parts for example one s ethnic identity religious identity and political identity 38 Optimal distinctiveness theory suggests that individuals have a desire to be similar to others but also a desire to differentiate themselves ultimately seeking some balance of these two desires to obtain optimal distinctiveness 39 For example one might imagine a young teenager in the United States who tries to balance these desires not wanting to be just like everyone else but also wanting to fit in and be similar to others One s collective self may offer a balance between these two desires 2 That is to be similar to others those who you share group membership with but also to be different from others those who are outside of your group Group cohesion Edit Main article Group cohesiveness In the social sciences group cohesion refers to the processes that keep members of a social group connected 4 Terms such as attraction solidarity and morale are often used to describe group cohesion 4 It is thought to be one of the most important characteristics of a group and has been linked to group performance 40 intergroup conflict 41 and therapeutic change 42 Group cohesion as a scientifically studied property of groups is commonly associated with Kurt Lewin and his student Leon Festinger Lewin defined group cohesion as the willingness of individuals to stick together and believed that without cohesiveness a group could not exist 4 As an extension of Lewin s work Festinger along with Stanley Schachter and Kurt Back described cohesion as the total field of forces which act on members to remain in the group Festinger Schachter amp Back 1950 p 37 4 Later this definition was modified to describe the forces acting on individual members to remain in the group termed attraction to the group 4 Since then several models for understanding the concept of group cohesion have been developed including Albert Carron s hierarchical model 43 and several bi dimensional models vertical v horizontal cohesion task v social cohesion belongingness and morale and personal v social attraction Before Lewin and Festinger there were of course descriptions of a very similar group property For example Emile Durkheim described two forms of solidarity mechanical and organic which created a sense of collective conscious and an emotion based sense of community 44 Black sheep effect Edit Beliefs within the ingroup are based on how individuals in the group see their other members Individuals tend to upgrade likeable in group members and deviate from unlikeable group members making them a separate outgroup This is called the black sheep effect 45 The way a person judges socially desirable and socially undesirable individuals depends upon whether they are part of the ingroup or outgroup This phenomenon has been later accounted for by subjective group dynamics theory 46 According to this theory people derogate socially undesirable deviant ingroup members relative to outgroup members because they give a bad image of the ingroup and jeopardize people s social identity In more recent studies Marques and colleagues 47 have shown that this occurs more strongly with regard to ingroup full members than other members Whereas new members of a group must prove themselves to the full members to become accepted full members have undergone socialization and are already accepted within the group They have more privilege than newcomers but more responsibility to help the group achieve its goals Marginal members were once full members but lost membership because they failed to live up to the group s expectations They can rejoin the group if they go through re socialization Therefore full members behavior is paramount to define the ingroup s image Bogart and Ryan surveyed the development of new members stereotypes about in groups and out groups during socialization Results showed that the new members judged themselves as consistent with the stereotypes of their in groups even when they had recently committed to join those groups or existed as marginal members They also tended to judge the group as a whole in an increasingly less positive manner after they became full members 48 However there is no evidence that this affects the way they are judged by other members Nevertheless depending on the self esteem of an individual members of the in group may experience different private beliefs about the group s activities but will publicly express the opposite that they actually share these beliefs One member may not personally agree with something the group does but to avoid the black sheep effect they will publicly agree with the group and keep the private beliefs to themselves If the person is privately self aware he or she is more likely to comply with the group even if they possibly have their own beliefs about the situation 49 In situations of hazing within fraternities and sororities on college campuses pledges may encounter this type of situation and may outwardly comply with the tasks they are forced to do regardless of their personal feelings about the Greek institution they are joining This is done in an effort to avoid becoming an outcast of the group 48 Outcasts who behave in a way that might jeopardize the group tend to be treated more harshly than the likeable ones in a group creating a black sheep effect Full members of a fraternity might treat the incoming new members harshly causing the pledges to decide if they approve of the situation and if they will voice their disagreeing opinions about it Group influence on individual behaviour Edit Individual behaviour is influenced by the presence of others 36 For example studies have found that individuals work harder and faster when others are present see social facilitation and that an individual s performance is reduced when others in the situation create distraction or conflict 36 Groups also influence individual s decision making processes These include decisions related to ingroup bias persuasion see Asch conformity experiments obedience see Milgram Experiment and groupthink There are both positive and negative implications of group influence on individual behaviour This type of influence is often useful in the context of work settings team sports and political activism However the influence of groups on the individual can also generate extremely negative behaviours evident in Nazi Germany the My Lai Massacre and in the Abu Ghraib prison also see Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse 50 Group structure Edit A group s structure is the internal framework that defines members relations to one another over time 51 Frequently studied elements of group structure include roles norms values communication patterns and status differentials 52 Group structure has also been defined as the underlying pattern of roles norms and networks of relations among members that define and organize the group 53 Roles can be defined as a tendency to behave contribute and interrelate with others in a particular way Roles may be assigned formally but more often are defined through the process of role differentiation 54 Role differentiation is the degree to which different group members have specialized functions A group with a high level of role differentiation would be categorized as having many different roles that are specialized and narrowly defined 53 A key role in a group is the leader but there are other important roles as well including task roles relationship roles and individual roles 53 Functional task roles are generally defined in relation to the tasks the team is expected to perform 55 Individuals engaged in task roles focus on the goals of the group and on enabling the work that members do examples of task roles include coordinator recorder critic or technician 53 A group member engaged in a relationship role or socioemotional role is focused on maintaining the interpersonal and emotional needs of the groups members examples of relationship role include encourager harmonizer or compromiser 53 Norms are the informal rules that groups adopt to regulate members behaviour Norms refer to what should be done and represent value judgments about appropriate behaviour in social situations Although they are infrequently written down or even discussed norms have powerful influence on group behaviour 56 unreliable source They are a fundamental aspect of group structure as they provide direction and motivation and organize the social interactions of members 53 Norms are said to be emergent as they develop gradually throughout interactions between group members 53 While many norms are widespread throughout society groups may develop their own norms that members must learn when they join the group There are various types of norms including prescriptive proscriptive descriptive and injunctive 53 Prescriptive Norms the socially appropriate way to respond in a social situation or what group members are supposed to do e g saying thank you after someone does a favour for you Proscriptive Norms actions that group members should not do prohibitive e g not belching in public Descriptive Norms describe what people usually do e g clapping after a speech Injunctive Norms describe behaviours that people ought to do more evaluative in nature than a descriptive normIntermember Relations are the connections among the members of a group or the social network within a group Group members are linked to one another at varying levels Examining the intermember relations of a group can highlight a group s density how many members are linked to one another or the degree centrality of members number of ties between members 53 Analysing the intermember relations aspect of a group can highlight the degree centrality of each member in the group which can lead to a better understanding of the roles of certain group e g an individual who is a go between in a group will have closer ties to numerous group members which can aid in communication etc 53 Values are goals or ideas that serve as guiding principles for the group 57 Like norms values may be communicated either explicitly or on an ad hoc basis Values can serve as a rallying point for the team However some values such as conformity can also be dysfunction and lead to poor decisions by the team Communication patterns describe the flow of information within the group and they are typically described as either centralized or decentralized With a centralized pattern communications tend to flow from one source to all group members Centralized communications allow standardization of information but may restrict the free flow of information Decentralized communications make it easy to share information directly between group members When decentralized communications tend to flow more freely but the delivery of information may not be as fast or accurate as with centralized communications Another potential downside of decentralized communications is the sheer volume of information that can be generated particularly with electronic media Status differentials are the relative differences in status among group members When a group is first formed the members may all be on an equal level but over time certain members may acquire status and authority within the group this can create what is known as a pecking order within a group 53 Status can be determined by a variety of factors and characteristics including specific status characteristics e g task specific behavioural and personal characteristics such as experience or diffuse status characteristics e g age race ethnicity 53 It is important that other group members perceive an individual s status to be warranted and deserved as otherwise they may not have authority within the group 53 Status differentials may affect the relative amount of pay among group members and they may also affect the group s tolerance to violation of group norms e g people with higher status may be given more freedom to violate group norms Group performance Edit Forsyth suggests that while many daily tasks undertaken by individuals could be performed in isolation the preference is to perform with other people 53 Social facilitation and performance gains Edit In a study of dynamogenic stimulation for the purpose of explaining pacemaking and competition in 1898 Norman Triplett theorized that the bodily presence of another rider is a stimulus to the racer in arousing the competitive instinct 58 This dynamogenic factor is believed to have laid the groundwork for what is now known as social facilitation an improvement in task performance that occurs when people work in the presence of other people 53 Further to Triplett s observation in 1920 Floyd Allport found that although people in groups were more productive than individuals the quality of their product effort was inferior 53 In 1965 Robert Zajonc expanded the study of arousal response originated by Triplett with further research in the area of social facilitation In his study Zajonc considered two experimental paradigms In the first audience effects Zajonc observed behaviour in the presence of passive spectators and the second co action effects he examined behaviour in the presence of another individual engaged in the same activity 59 Zajonc observed two categories of behaviours dominant responses to tasks that are easier to learn and which dominate other potential responses and nondominant responses to tasks that are less likely to be performed In his Theory of Social Facilitation Zajonc concluded that in the presence of others when action is required depending on the task requirement either social facilitation or social interference will impact the outcome of the task If social facilitation occurs the task will have required a dominant response from the individual resulting in better performance in the presence of others whereas if social interference occurs the task will have elicited a nondominant response from the individual resulting in subpar performance of the task 53 Several theories analysing performance gains in groups via drive motivational cognitive and personality processes explain why social facilitation occurs Zajonc hypothesized that compresence the state of responding in the presence of others elevates an individual s drive level which in turn triggers social facilitation when tasks are simple and easy to execute but impedes performance when tasks are challenging 53 Nickolas Cottrell 1972 proposed the evaluation apprehension model whereby he suggested people associate social situations with an evaluative process Cottrell argued this situation is met with apprehension and it is this motivational response not arousal elevated drive that is responsible for increased productivity on simple tasks and decreased productivity on complex tasks in the presence of others 53 In The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life 1959 Erving Goffman assumes that individuals can control how they are perceived by others He suggests that people fear being perceived as having negative undesirable qualities and characteristics by other people and that it is this fear that compels individuals to portray a positive self presentation social image of themselves In relation to performance gains Goffman s self presentation theory predicts in situations where they may be evaluated individuals will consequently increase their efforts in order to project preserve maintain a positive image 53 Distraction conflict theory contends that when a person is working in the presence of other people an interference effect occurs splitting the individual s attention between the task and the other person On simple tasks where the individual is not challenged by the task the interference effect is negligible and performance therefore is facilitated On more complex tasks where drive is not strong enough to effectively compete against the effects of distraction there is no performance gain The Stroop task Stroop effect demonstrated that by narrowing a person s focus of attention on certain tasks distractions can improve performance 53 Social orientation theory considers the way a person approaches social situations It predicts that self confident individuals with a positive outlook will show performance gains through social facilitation whereas a self conscious individual approaching social situations with apprehension is less likely to perform well due to social interference effects 53 Intergroup dynamics EditIntergroup dynamics or intergroup relations refers to the behavioural and psychological relationship between two or more groups This includes perceptions attitudes opinions and behaviours towards one s own group as well as those towards another group In some cases intergroup dynamics is prosocial positive and beneficial for example when multiple research teams work together to accomplish a task or goal In other cases intergroup dynamics can create conflict For example Fischer amp Ferlie found initially positive dynamics between a clinical institution and its external authorities dramatically changed to a hot and intractable conflict when authorities interfered with its embedded clinical model 60 Similarly underlying the 1999 Columbine High School shooting in Littleton Colorado United States intergroup dynamics played a significant role in Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold s decision to kill a teacher and 14 students including themselves 50 Intergroup conflict Edit According to social identity theory intergroup conflict starts with a process of comparison between individuals in one group the ingroup to those of another group the outgroup 61 This comparison process is not unbiased and objective Instead it is a mechanism for enhancing one s self esteem 2 In the process of such comparisons an individual tends to favour the ingroup over the outgroup exaggerate and overgeneralize the differences between the ingroup and the outgroup to enhance group distinctiveness minimize the perception of differences between ingroup members remember more detailed and positive information about the ingroup and more negative information about the outgroup 62 Even without any intergroup interaction as in the minimal group paradigm individuals begin to show favouritism towards their own group and negative reactions towards the outgroup 62 This conflict can result in prejudice stereotypes and discrimination Intergroup conflict can be highly competitive especially for social groups with a long history of conflict for example the 1994 Rwandan genocide rooted in group conflict between the ethnic Hutu and Tutsi 2 In contrast intergroup competition can sometimes be relatively harmless particularly in situations where there is little history of conflict for example between students of different universities leading to relatively harmless generalizations and mild competitive behaviours 2 Intergroup conflict is commonly recognized amidst racial ethnic religious and political groups The formation of intergroup conflict was investigated in a popular series of studies by Muzafer Sherif and colleagues in 1961 called the Robbers Cave Experiment 63 The Robbers Cave Experiment was later used to support realistic conflict theory 64 Other prominent theories relating to intergroup conflict include social dominance theory and social self categorization theory Intergroup conflict reduction Edit There have been several strategies developed for reducing the tension bias prejudice and conflict between social groups These include the contact hypothesis the jigsaw classroom and several categorization based strategies Contact hypothesis intergroup contact theory Edit In 1954 Gordon Allport suggested that by promoting contact between groups prejudice can be reduced 65 Further he suggested four optimal conditions for contact equal status between the groups in the situation common goals intergroup cooperation and the support of authorities law or customs 66 Since then over 500 studies have been done on prejudice reduction under variations of the contact hypothesis and a meta analytic review suggests overall support for its efficacy 66 In some cases even without the four optimal conditions outlined by Allport prejudice between groups can be reduced 66 Superordinate identities Edit Under the contact hypothesis several models have been developed A number of these models utilize a superordinate identity to reduce prejudice That is a more broadly defined umbrella group identity that includes the groups that are in conflict By emphasizing this superordinate identity individuals in both subgroups can share a common social identity 67 For example if there is conflict between White Black and Latino students in a high school one might try to emphasize the high school group identity that students share to reduce conflict between the groups Models utilizing superordinate identities include the common ingroup identity model the ingroup projection model the mutual intergroup differentiation model and the ingroup identity model 67 Similarly recategorization is a broader term used by Gaertner et al to describe the strategies aforementioned 62 Interdependence Edit There are also techniques for reducing prejudice that utilize interdependence between two or more groups That is members across groups have to rely on one another to accomplish some goal or task In the Robbers Cave Experiment Sherif used this strategy to reduce conflict between groups 62 Elliot Aronson s Jigsaw Classroom also uses this strategy of interdependence 68 In 1971 thick racial tensions were abounding in Austin Texas Aronson was brought in to examine the nature of this tension within schools and to devise a strategy for reducing it so to improve the process of school integration mandated under Brown v Board of Education in 1954 Despite strong evidence for the effectiveness of the jigsaw classroom the strategy was not widely used arguably because of strong attitudes existing outside of the schools which still resisted the notion that racial and ethnic minority groups are equal to Whites and similarly should be integrated into schools Selected academic journals EditGroup Processes amp Intergroup Relations Group Dynamics Theory Research and Practice Small Group Research Group Analysis International Journal of Group Psychotherapy The Journal for Specialists in Group Work Social Work With Groups International Journal on Minority and Group Rights Group Facilitation A Research and Applications Journal Organizational and Social DynamicsSee also EditCog s ladder Collaboration Collaborative method Decision downloading Entitativity Facilitator Frog pond effect Group narcissism Intergroup dialogue Intergroup relations Interpersonal relationships Maintenance actions Organization climate Out group homogeneity Small group communication Social psychology Social psychology sociology Social tuning Team effectiveness Team based learningReferences Edit Backstrom L Huttenlocher D Kleinberg J Lan X 2006 Group formation in large social networks Proceedings of the 12th ACM SIGKDD international conference on Knowledge discovery and data mining KDD 06 p 44 doi 10 1145 1150402 1150412 ISBN 978 1595933393 S2CID 7904289 a b c d e f g h i j Hogg M A Williams K D 2000 From I to we Social identity and the collective self Group Dynamics Theory Research and Practice 4 81 97 doi 10 1037 1089 2699 4 1 81 Westheimer G 1999 Gestalt theory reconfigured Max Wertheimer s anticipation of recent developments in visual neuroscience Perception 28 1 5 15 doi 10 1068 p2883 PMID 10627849 S2CID 9800976 a b c d e f Dion K L 2000 Group cohesion From field of forces to multidimensional construct Group Dynamics Theory Research and Practice 4 7 26 doi 10 1037 1089 2699 4 1 7 Lewin Kurt 1945 The Research Center for Group Dynamics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sociometry 8 2 126 136 doi 10 2307 2785233 JSTOR 2785233 Van Vugt M Schaller M 2008 Evolutionary approaches to group dynamics An introduction Group Dynamics Theory Research and Practice 12 1 6 doi 10 1037 1089 2699 12 1 1 S2CID 15306280 Hammer Espen Adorno and the political pp 58 9 Benne K D Bradford L P Gibb J R 1972 Geschichte der Trainingsgruppe im Laboratorium In K D Benne ed Gruppentraining Stuttgart Klett Verlag pp 95 154 Schutz W 1958 FIRO A Three Dimensional Theory of Interpersonal Behavior New York NY Rinehart Schutz W 1966 The Interpersonal Underworld Updated version based on 1958 work Palo Alto CA Science and Behavior Books Page 194 to 196 Irvin D Yalom The Theory and Practice of Group Psychotherapy third edition Basic Books 1985 hardback ISBN 0 465 08447 8 Peck M S 1987 The Different Drum Community Making and Peace p 95 103 J Richard Hackman 2002 Leading Teams Setting the Stage for Great Performances Harvard Business Press Wageman R 1995 Interdependence and Group Effectiveness Administrative Science Quarterly 40 1 145 180 doi 10 2307 2393703 JSTOR 2393703 Cohen D Nisbett R E Bowdle B F Schwarz N 1996 Insult aggression and the southern culture of honor An experimental ethnography Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 70 5 945 959 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 70 5 945 hdl 2027 42 92155 PMID 8656339 Cohen D 1998 Culture social organization and patterns of violence Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 75 2 408 419 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 458 621 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 75 2 408 PMID 9731316 Sherif M 1936 The psychology of social norms New York Harper a b Majchrzak A Jarvenpaa S L Hollingshead A B 2007 Coordinating Expertise Among Emergent Groups Responding to Disasters Organization Science 18 147 161 doi 10 1287 orsc 1060 0228 S2CID 43354804 Lucas Richard E Diener Ed 2001 Understanding extraverts enjoyment of social situations The importance of pleasantness Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 81 2 343 356 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 81 2 343 PMID 11519937 Gore Jonathan S Cross Susan E Morris Michael L 2006 03 01 Let s be friends Relational self construal and the development of intimacy Personal Relationships 13 1 83 102 doi 10 1111 j 1475 6811 2006 00106 x ISSN 1475 6811 McAdams Dan P Constantian Carol A 1983 Intimacy and affiliation motives in daily living An experience sampling analysis Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 45 4 851 861 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 45 4 851 Turner Jonathan 1974 12 01 THE POWER MOTIVE By David G Winter New York Free Press 1973 373 pp 12 00 Social Forces 53 2 363 364 doi 10 1093 sf 53 2 363 ISSN 0037 7732 McAdams Dan P Constantian Carol A 1983 Intimacy and affiliation motives in daily living An experience sampling analysis Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 45 4 851 861 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 45 4 851 Rom Eldad Mikulincer Mario 2003 Attachment theory and group processes The association between attachment style and group related representations goals memories and functioning Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 84 6 1220 1235 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 84 6 1220 PMID 12793586 Bohrnstedt George W Fisher Gene A 1986 The Effects of Recalled Childhood and Adolescent Relationships Compared to Current Role Performances on Young Adults Affective Functioning Social Psychology Quarterly 49 1 19 32 doi 10 2307 2786854 JSTOR 2786854 McGuire Gail M 2007 Intimate Work Work and Occupations 34 2 125 147 doi 10 1177 0730888406297313 S2CID 145394891 a b Uchino Bert N 2004 Social support and physical health understanding the health consequences of relationships New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 9780300102185 OCLC 182530829 a b Hogg Michael A Abrams Dominic 1993 Group motivation social psychological perspectives New York Harvester Wheatsheaf ISBN 978 0745012391 OCLC 28963933 a b c d H Kelley Harold 1978 Interpersonal relations a theory of interdependence Thibaut John W New York Wiley ISBN 978 0471034735 OCLC 3627845 a b c d e f g h i j k Forsyth Donelson 2006 Group Dynamics Belmont CA Wadsworth W Thibaut John 1986 The social psychology of groups Kelley Harold H New Brunswick U S A Transaction Books p 21 ISBN 9780887386336 OCLC 12662505 Lickel B Hamilton D L Wieczorkowska G Lewis A Sherman S J Uhles A N 2000 Varieties of groups and the perception of group entitativity Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 78 2 223 246 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 78 2 223 PMID 10707331 Cooley Charles 1909 social organization a study of the larger mind New York Charles Scribner s Sons Campbell D T 1958 Common fate similarity and other indices of the status of aggregates of persons as social entities Systems Research and Behavioral Science 3 1 14 25 doi 10 1002 bs 3830030103 Haslam N Rothschild L Ernst D 2002 Are essentialist beliefs associated with prejudice British Journal of Social Psychology 41 1 87 100 doi 10 1348 014466602165072 PMID 11970776 a b c Crano W D 2000 Milestones in the psychological analysis of social influence Group Dynamics Theory Research and Practice 4 68 80 doi 10 1037 1089 2699 4 1 68 Spears R Ellemers N Doosje B 2005 Let me count the ways in which I respect thee Does competence compensate or compromise lack of liking from the group European Journal of Social Psychology 35 2 263 279 doi 10 1002 ejsp 248 Deaux K Reid A Mizrahi K Ethier K A 1995 Parameters of social identity Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 68 2 280 291 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 68 2 280 Brewer M B 1991 The Social Self On Being the Same and Different at the Same Time Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 17 5 475 482 doi 10 1177 0146167291175001 S2CID 145294289 Gully S M Devine D J Whitney D J 1995 A Meta Analysis of Cohesion and Performance Effects of Level of Analysis and Task Interdependence Small Group Research 26 4 497 520 doi 10 1177 1046496495264003 S2CID 145303557 Stein A A 1976 Conflict and Cohesion A Review of the Literature Journal of Conflict Resolution 20 143 172 doi 10 1177 002200277602000106 S2CID 145093926 Yalom Irvin 1995 The theory and practice of group psychotherapy New York Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 08448 7 Carron A V Brawley L R 2000 Cohesion Conceptual and Measurement Issues Small Group Research 31 89 106 doi 10 1177 104649640003100105 S2CID 220367599 Driedger Leo 1996 Multi ethnic Canada identities and inequalities Toronto New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 541161 4 Marques J M Yzerbyt V Y Leyens J Ph 1988 The black sheep effect Judgmental extremity towards ingroup members as a function of ingroup identification European Journal of Social Psychology 18 1 1 16 doi 10 1002 ejsp 2420180102 Marques J M Abrams D Paez D Taboada C 1998 The role of categorization and ingroup norms in judgments of groups and their members Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 75 4 976 988 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 75 4 976 Pinto I R Marques J M Levine J M Abrams D 2016 Membership role and subjective group dynamics Impact on evaluative intragroup differentiation and commitment to prescriptive norms PDF Group Processes and Intergroup Relations On Line 19 5 570 590 doi 10 1177 1368430216638531 S2CID 147836059 a b Ryan Carey S Bogart Laura M Oct 1997 Development of new group members in group and out group stereotypes Changes in perceived variability and ethnocentrism Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 73 4 719 732 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 73 4 719 PMID 9325590 Pinto I R Marques J M Abrams D 2010 Membership status and subjective group dynamics Who triggers the black sheep effect Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 99 1 107 119 doi 10 1037 a0018187 PMID 20565188 a b Aronson Elliot 2008 The social animal New York Worth Publishers ISBN 978 1 4292 0316 6 Wittenbaum and Moreland 2008 Small Group Research in Social Psychology Topics and Trends over Time Jex Steve amp Britt Thomas 2008 Organizational Psychology A Scientist Practitioner Approach Second ed Hoboken New Jersey John Wiley amp Sons Inc pp 341 365 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Forsyth D R 2009 Group Dynamics New York Wadsworth Levine 1998 The Handbook of Social Psychology full citation needed Senior 1991 Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology Hahn M 2010 Group Norms in Organizations Schwarz 2007 Are There Universal Aspects in the Structure and Contents of Human Values Triplett N 1898 The Dynamogenic Factors in Pacemaking and Competition The American Journal of Psychology 9 4 507 533 doi 10 2307 1412188 JSTOR 1412188 Robert B Zajonc July 16 1965 Social Facilitation Science New Series 149 3681 269 274 Bibcode 1965Sci 149 269Z doi 10 1126 science 149 3681 269 JSTOR 1715944 PMID 14300526 Fischer Michael Daniel Ferlie Ewan 1 January 2013 Resisting hybridisation between modes of clinical risk management Contradiction contest and the production of intractable conflict PDF Accounting Organizations and Society 38 1 30 49 doi 10 1016 j aos 2012 11 002 S2CID 44146410 Turner J C 1975 Social comparison and social identity Some prospects for intergroup behaviour European Journal of Social Psychology 5 1 34 doi 10 1002 ejsp 2420050102 a b c d Gaertner S L Dovidio J F Banker B S Houlette M Johnson K M McGlynn E A 2000 Reducing intergroup conflict From superordinate goals to decategorization recategorization and mutual differentiation Group Dynamics Theory Research and Practice 4 98 114 doi 10 1037 1089 2699 4 1 98 Sherif Muzafer 1988 The Robbers Cave Experiment Middletown Wesleyan University Press ISBN 978 0 8195 6194 7 Levine Robert 1971 Ethnocentrism Theories of Conflict Ethnic Attitudes and Group Behavior New York Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 53117 3 Allport Gordon 1979 The Nature of Prejudice Reading Addison Wesley Pub Co ISBN 978 0 201 00179 2 a b c Pettigrew T F Tropp L R 2006 A Meta Analytic Test of Intergroup Contact Theory Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 90 5 751 783 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 90 5 751 PMID 16737372 a b Hornsey M J Hogg M A 2000 Subgroup Relations A Comparison of Mutual Intergroup Differentiation and Common Ingroup Identity Models of Prejudice Reduction Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 26 2 242 256 doi 10 1177 0146167200264010 S2CID 145116253 Aronson Elliot 1997 The Jigsaw Classroom New York Longman ISBN 978 0 673 99383 0 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Group dynamics amp oldid 1132748422, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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