CRM/LAW C105 Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Peer Pressure, Social Loafing, Social Proof
Document Summary
Normative vs. informational influence: if your opinion changes: Normative: peer pressure, conform to the group, unanimity required. Informational: group is conveying info you hadn"t previously considered. Normative influence tends to change your behavior but doesn"t necessarily change your beliefs. Informational influence would change your behavior and beliefs. Unanimity requirement: promotes the deliberation" ideal. Evidence drive less personal than verdict driven deliberations. Verdict driven deliberations are more likely to hang: 6th amendment requires that a jury is a fair cross section of the community . Apodaca v. oregon (1972)- held that only in federal cases that juries are required to have unanimity. Does size matter: ballew v. georgia (1978) Functional equivalence (?: 12 person jury more likely to: