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"Am Psychol. 2009 Jan;64(1):1-11. doi: 10.1037/a0010932.
Deparment of Psychology, Santa Clara University, CA 95053-0001, USA. jburger@scu.edu
The author conducted a partial replication of Stanley Milgram's (1963, 1965, 1974) obedience studies that allowed for useful comparisons with the original investigations while protecting the well-being of participants.
Seventy adults participated in a replication of Milgram's Experiment 5 up to the point at which they first heard the learner's verbal protest (150 volts).
[The original study continued through other stages, to the final button whose button was labeled something that suggested pushing it could kill the person getting the shocks.]
Because 79% of Milgram's participants who went past this point continued to the end of the shock generator's range, reasonable estimates could be made about what the present participants would have done if allowed to continue.
Obedience rates in the 2006 replication were only slightly lower than those Milgram found 45 years earlier. Contrary to expectation, participants who saw a confederate refuse the experimenter's instructions obeyed as often as those who saw no model. Men and women did not differ in their rates of obedience, but there was some evidence that individual differences in empathic concern and desire for control affected participants' responses.
Below is a link to a discussion of Milgram's original study. I find the failure in this study of a model behavior to influence others very sobering. Most of us are not leaders to our friends, family, and neighbors. In most cases, the best we can try for is to be a good example.