Zimbardo's Stanford Prison Experiment (1973)
Picture this: you volunteer for a psychology study and suddenly find yourself arrested at home, blindfolded, and thrown into a mock prison. That's exactly what happened to emotionally stable volunteers in Zimbardo's groundbreaking experiment. The aim was simple yet profound - to understand how social roles (the parts we play in different groups) affect our behaviour.
The setup was incredibly realistic. Participants were randomly assigned as either guards or prisoners, with "prisoners" being arrested from their homes without warning. They were stripped, fingerprinted, and given uniforms with numbers instead of names. This process created deindividuation - basically, people lost their individual identity and personal responsibility.
The results were absolutely terrifying. Guards became brutally enthusiastic about their roles, whilst prisoners became increasingly submissive and obedient. The experiment had to be stopped early because the guards' behaviour became genuinely threatening to the prisoners' physical and psychological wellbeing.
Key Insight: Everyone conformed to their assigned roles so completely that it demonstrated the incredible power of situations in influencing behaviour - sometimes more than our personalities do.
The study showed both conformity (total acceptance of roles) and obedience (prisoners following guard authority). Most shocking of all? Only about a third of guards actually behaved brutally, suggesting personality still matters alongside situational factors.