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Subject Item
dbpedia:Stanley_Milgram
rdfs:comment
Stanley Milgram (August 15, 1933 – December 20, 1984) was an American social psychologist, best known for his controversial experiment on obedience conducted in the 1960s during his professorship at Yale. Milgram was influenced by the events of the Holocaust, specifically the trial of Adolf Eichmann, in developing this experiment.His small-world experiment while at Harvard would lead researchers to analyze the degree of connectedness, most notably the six degrees of separation concept.
foaf:name
Stanley Milgram Milgram, Stanley
dc:description
Social psychologist
dbpedia-owl:birthDate
1933-08-15Z
dbpedia-owl:birthPlace
dbpedia:New_York dbpedia:United_States dbpedia:New_York_City
dbpedia-owl:birthYear
1933-01-01Z
dbpedia-owl:deathCause
dbpedia:Myocardial_infarction
dbpedia-owl:deathDate
1984-12-20Z
dbpedia-owl:deathPlace
dbpedia:New_York dbpedia:United_States dbpedia:Manhattan dbpedia:New_York_City
dbpedia-owl:deathYear
1984-01-01Z
dbpedia-owl:education
dbpedia:Social_psychology dbpedia:Harvard_University n6:_City_University_of_New_York
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dbpedia:Familiar_stranger dbpedia:Small-world_experiment dbpedia:Milgram_experiment
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dbpedia:Americans
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dbpedia:Americans