Deception research is a specific kind of laboratory experiment used in the social sciences where participants are intentionally given false information about what is really being studied. The purpose is not to trick people for sport, but to create a psychological reality: a situation where participants behave naturally.
Deception research is foundational to Social Influence Research, which generally falls into three categories: conformity, compliance, and obedience. Conformity examines how individuals change their behavior to match a group. Compliance studies how people respond to requests from others. And obedience, the most intense category, investigates how people respond to direct orders from an authority figure. These studies often rely on carefully staged scenarios that place ordinary people in situations that would be impossible, or deeply unethical, to recreate in real life.
The most famous example is the Milgram Experiment. Participants were told they were taking part in a “Scientific Study of Memory and Learning” at Yale University. A supposedly random draw assigned roles of Teacher and Learner, but the draw was rigged: the real participant was always the Teacher, and the Learner was an actor.
The Teacher was seated before an imposing shock generator and instructed to administer increasingly severe electrical shocks whenever the Learner made a mistake. The shocks were fake, the experience real. As switches labeled “Danger: Severe Shock” were flipped, the Teacher heard prerecorded screams, pleas, and eventually silence. When participants hesitated or protested, the experimenter, calm, distant, and authoritative, responded with a simple prod:
“The experiment requires that you continue.”
The result was disturbing. Sixty-five percent of participants were willing to administer what they believed to be a lethal shock, not because they were cruel, but because the situation framed obedience as the correct procedure.
The lesson was stark: under the right conditions, authority can override conscience.