The
granfalloon technique is a method of persuasion in which individuals are encouraged to identify with a particular granfalloon or social group. The pressure to identify with a group is meant as a method of securing the individual's loyalty and commitment through adoption of the group's symbols, rituals, and beliefs. In social psychology, the concept stems from research by the Polish social psychologist
Henri Tajfel, whose findings have come to be known as the
minimal group paradigm. In his research, Tajfel found that strangers would form groups on the basis of completely inconsequential criteria. In one study, Tajfel subjects were asked to watch a coin toss. They were then designated to a particular group based on whether the coin landed on heads or tails. The subjects placed in groups based on such meaningless associations between them have consistently been found to "act as if those sharing the meaningless labels were kin or close friends." Researchers since Tajfel have made strides into unraveling the mystery behind this phenomenon. Today it is broken down into two basic psychological processes, one cognitive and one motivational. First, knowing that one is a part of this group is used to make sense of the world. When one associates with a particular group, those in the group focus on the similarities between the members. However, for people not in the group, or "outsiders," differences are focused upon and often exaggerated. A problem with the granfalloon is that it often leads to
in-group, out-group bias. Second,
social groups provide a source of self-esteem and pride, a form of reverse
Groucho Marxism as in his famous remark "I don't care to belong to any club that would have me as a member." The
imagined communities of
Benedict Anderson form a similar concept. Therapist Grant Devilly considers that granfalloons are one explanation for how
pseudoscientific topics are promoted. ==Trivia==