Sign In

9.3 : Group Polarization

Group polarization is the strengthening of an original group attitude following the discussion of views within a group (Teger & Pruitt, 1967). That is, if a group initially favors a viewpoint, after discussion the group consensus is likely a stronger endorsement of the viewpoint. Conversely, if the group was initially opposed to a viewpoint, group discussion would likely lead to stronger opposition.

The phenomenon of group polarization explains many actions taken by groups that would not be undertaken by individuals. Group polarization can be observed at political conventions, when platforms of the party are supported by individuals who, when not in a group, would decline to support them. A more everyday example is a group’s discussion of how attractive someone is. Does your opinion change if you find someone attractive, but your friends do not agree? If your friends vociferously agree, might you then find this person even more attractive?

 

This text is adapted from OpenStax, Psychology. OpenStax CNX.

Tags
Group PolarizationSocial InteractionLike minded GroupsBeliefsAttitudesStudent Environmental ClubOpinionsGroup ConsensusExtreme EndSocial Media SitesAlternative PerspectivesNetwork Of ExtremismDark WebViolent MessagesOriginal Group AttitudeGroup Discussion

From Chapter 9:

article

Now Playing

9.3 : Group Polarization

Group Dynamics

31.9K Views

article

9.1 : Social Facilitation

Group Dynamics

30.1K Views

article

9.2 : Social Loafing

Group Dynamics

32.3K Views

article

9.4 : Groupthink

Group Dynamics

40.9K Views

article

9.5 : Deindividuation

Group Dynamics

24.8K Views

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved