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The Scientific Study
of Groups: A Timeline of the period from 1890 to 1960
Aristotle (in the Nichomachean Ethics), Machievelli (Prince),
and Shakespeare all commented, insightfully, on the nature
of groups. It was not, however, until the 20th century that
researchers began studying groups scientifically. The following
timeline stretches from 1890 to 1960.
- 1890: James puts forward several theories that explain
various social psychological processes that are relevant
to groups, including social identity.
- 1895: LeBon publishes Le Psychologie des Foules
- 1897: Durkheim discusses the impact of groups on social
behavior, particulary primary groups. He publishes his
classic work Suicide, which explains how an individualistic
action can be explained through reference to social forces.
- 1897: Triplett publishes the first laboratory study
of a social psychological phemononon (click here to review).
- 1907: Cooley publishes work dealing with social organization,
structure
- 1908: The first two social psychology textbooks are
published; both are titled Social Psychology.
- 1918: Thomas and Znaniecki publish their classic Polish
peasant in Europe and America
- 1920s: Elton Mayo and his colleagues study productivity
in the Hawthorne plant; they discover that group processes
dramatically influence production.
- 1924: Durkheim and Allport debate the reality of social
products, including groups.
- 1928: Thurstone publishes a precedent-setting paper
entitled "Attitudes can be measured."
- 1934: Moreno presents sociometry
- 1936: Sherif demonstrates that a purely social phenomonon--a
social norm--could be created in a laboratory.
- 1937: Lewin, Lippitt, and White study group members'
reactions to leaders who adopt autocratic, demoncratic,
or laissez faire styles of leadership.
- 1939: A group of researchers at Yale University publish
data suggesting aggression is caused by frustration (Dollard,
Doob, Miller, Mowrer, & Sears, 1939).
- 1943: Whyte uses participant observation to study urban
street-corner gangs.
- 1943: Newcomb examines the impact of social pressure
on attitudes among students at Bennington College.
- 1946: Bales begins work on IPA
- 1953: A group of researchers at Yale publish the results
of a programatic study of attitude change (Hovland, Janis,
& Kelley, 1953).
- 1954: Publication of Allport's timeless analysis of
prejudice and stereotyping. Also, the first "modern" edition
of the Handbook of Social Psychology is published.
- 1957: Festinger initiates two decades of research on
attitude change with the publication of his book A theory
of cognitive dissonance.
- 1958: Heider presents a theory of "commonsense psychology"
that provides the basis for all attribution theory and
research.
- 1959: Thibaut and Kelley publish a general theory of
social enchange and interpersonal relations.
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