Random DocumentaryStorm Documentary Top Documentary List
DocumentaryStorm on Twitter  DocumentaryStorm RSS  Subscribe to DocumentaryStorm via E-mail  

Recent Comments
  • From Christian to Atheist by David Broman: I love this statement: “Any rudimentary search will show that the most peaceful, stable countries in the world are the one that...
  • From Christian to Atheist by ssg45: I made no mention of people’s actions. Action and belief are NOT synonymous. To equate a yund earth creationist to a suicide bomber is...
  • From Christian to Atheist by ssg45: I’m quite positive that ‘David Broman’ was speaking in support of reason, not religion. That was a mix up on your part. And...
  • Derren Brown Investigates: The Ghosthunter by Aficionado: Kudos to Derren Brown for managing to keep a straight face during his interactions with these people. I simply...
  • World’s Scariest Drug by hhkj: take this with grain of salt, and look at escopamine on wikipedia
  • North Korean Labor Camps by waz: No, that wasn’t my argument, re-read before you get your hypothetical knickers in a torsion. Clearly all human life has potential, and...
  • North Korean Labor Camps by waz: No, that wasn’t my argument, re-read before you get your hypothetical knickers in a torsion. Clearly all human life has potential, and...
  • North Korean Labor Camps by waz: No, that wasn’t my argument, re-read before you get your hypothetical knickers in a torsion. Clearly all human life has potential, and...
  • North Korean Labor Camps by waz: No, that wasn’t my argument, re-read before you get your hypothetical knickers in a torsion. Clearly all human life has potential, and...
  • North Korean Labor Camps by waz: No, that wasn’t my argument, re-read before you get your hypothetical knickers in a torsion. Clearly all human life has potential, and...
  • North Korean Labor Camps by waz: No, that wasn’t my argument, re-read before you get your hypothetical knickers in a torsion. Clearly all human life has potential, and...
  • North Korean Labor Camps by watcher: No, that wasn’t my argument, re-read before you get your hypothetical knickers in a torsion. Clearly all human life has potential, and...
  • The Stanford Prison Experiment


    The Stanford Prison Experiment

    The Stanford prison experiment was a study of the psychological effects of becoming a prisoner or prison guard. The experiment was conducted from August 14 to 20, 1971 by a team of researchers led by Psychology professor Philip Zimbardo (Also the host of the documentary series Discovering Psychology) at Stanford University. It was funded by a grant from the U.S. Office of Naval Research and was of interest to both the US Navy and Marine Corps in order to determine the causes of conflict between military guards and prisoners.

    Twenty-four students were selected out of 75 to play the prisoners and live in a mock prison in the basement of the Stanford psychology building. Roles were assigned randomly. The participants adapted to their roles well beyond what even Zimbardo himself expected, leading the “Officers” to display authoritarian measures and ultimately to subject some of the prisoners to torture. In turn, many of the prisoners developed passive attitudes and accepted physical abuse, and, at the request of the guards, readily inflicted punishment on other prisoners who attempted to stop it. The experiment even affected Zimbardo himself, who, in his capacity as “Prison Superintendent,” lost sight of his role as psychologist and permitted the abuse to continue as though it were a real prison. Five of the prisoners were upset enough by the process to quit the experiment early, and the entire experiment was abruptly stopped after only six days. The experimental process and the results remain controversial.

    The results of the experiment are said to support situational attribution of behavior rather than dispositional attribution. In other words, it seemed the situation caused the participants’ behavior, rather than anything inherent in their individual personalities. In this way, it is compatible with the results of the also-famous Milgram experiment, in which ordinary people fulfilled orders to administer what appeared to be agonizing and dangerous electric shocks to a confederate of the experimenter.

    The Stanford Prison Experiment, 4.0 out of 6 based on 2 ratings
    GD Star Rating
    loading...

    Share This Documentary

    Similar Documentaries

    Discuss This Documentary

    • bearnuts

      They could have just run a study at Marine Corps boot camp and avoided all the ethical issues.

      I would have been the hunger striker. YUT!

    • wewe

      Cool soundtrack man the whole documentary was set to the Boards wtf…. and this looks like an old documentary way before Geogaddi man.. was it put there on purpose?

    • Wolfboy183

      i probably would have tried to kill somebody even after the experiment

    • Cam

      boards of canada for the win!

    • Me

      Really interesting experience. I would have wanted to see women in the same roles, maybe mix both gender together and then make another test. I’m not saying that a woman or two would change the experiment in any way.