首页
登录
职称英语
Do Clean Smell Encourage Clean Behavior Years ago, social s
Do Clean Smell Encourage Clean Behavior Years ago, social s
游客
2024-02-14
22
管理
问题
Do Clean Smell Encourage Clean Behavior
Years ago, social scientists introduced the broken-windows theory of crime control, which assumed that if a neighborhood looked orderly and cared for—with no broken windows—potential wrongdoers would be dissuaded from committing crimes there. Now psychologists have proposed a similar theory, which suggests that people can be induced to behave morally when their environment smells as clean as it looks.
It’s the Macbeth principle of morality, says Katie Liljenquist, professor of organizational leadership at Brigham Young University’s Marriott School of Management and lead author of the new study, to be published in Psychological Science. "There is a strong link between moral and physical purity that people associate at a core level. People feel contaminated (受污染的) by immoral choices and try to wash away their sins," says Liljenquist. "To some degree, washing actually is effective in relieving guilt. What we wondered was whether you could regulate ethical behavior through cleanliness. We found that we could. "
In two separate experiments, researchers were able to influence participants’ behavior by exposing them to "cleanliness" in the form of a common cleaning agent’s smell—in this case, orange-scented Windex (清新剂). It turned out that people who sat in a room sprayed with Windex were more likely to act fairly and charitably than those in unscented air.
The first experiment involved an anonymous game of trust. The 28 study participants were told they would be "receivers," with whom a group of anonymous "senders" had been instructed to invest money. Participants were told that each sender had been given $ 4 and told that any part of it invested with receivers would be tripled. The job of the receiver, then, was to decide what portion of the dividends to return to the sender.
In reality, there was no sender, and each study participant received $12, making it seem as though the senders had entrusted them with the full $ 4 they had been given. But would the receivers return that trust or exploit their unidentified investors? On average, those in the plain-smelling room returned $2.5 to the sender, pocketing the lion’s share of the money. But those bathed in the scent of Windex sent back an average of $ 5.5, returning the senders’ blind faith.
The scientists insist they didn’t overdo it with the Windex, just a few spritzes(喷)—so we can get. rid of brain-cell death or poisoning-induced generosity as reasons why those receivers gave back so much of the stolen property. Rather, Liljenquist says, "a moral awareness was awakened in a clean-smelling environment. "
In the second experiment, researchers aimed to manipulate people’s tendency toward charity. Ninety-nine participants were assigned to either a Windex-scented room or a neutral-smelling room and given a packet of tasks to complete. Included in the packet was a flyer requesting volunteers and donations to the charity Habitat for Humanity. As expected, people in the Windex-sprayed room were more inclined to volunteer and give money than those in the unscented room—22% of those in the clean group said they wanted to donate money, compared with 6% of the controls.
According to co-author Adam Galinsky, a social psychologist at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management, society relies on incentives(刺激,动机), in the form of rewards and punishments, to encourage people to adjust to certain standards of behavior. "Economists and even psychologists haven’t been paying much attention to the fact that small changes in our environment can have dramatic effects on behavior. We underemphasize these subtle environmental cues," he says.
Liljenquist says the real-life implications of the study could be as simple as an office investing more in janitorial supplies (清洁用品) than in expensive investigation equipment to keep workers in line. Other researchers suggest, however, that perhaps it wasn’t the clean smell that made people more virtuous in the new study, but rather the smell of orange; that is, people may have behaved better because they smelled something they liked, rather than something "clean." "It could be simply that a positive smell creates a positive mood, which encourages positive behavior. You cannot conclude it is cleanliness of itself," says Brown University psychologist Rachel Herz, author of The Scent of Desire. To rule out the contradictory factor of good smells, she says, the study’s authors could have added a third room to the experiment scented with recently baked chocolate chip cookies, for example.
Nevertheless, both morality researchers and olfactory(嗅觉的) scientists agree that people do strongly associate physical cleanliness with purity of conscience. It is the notion at the heart of proverbs like "cleanliness is next to godliness" and evidenced by the widespread use of cleansing ceremonies to wash away sins in various religions around the world. (Truth be told, that practice is merely a reckoning of an evolutionary strategy to avoid disease.)
For their part, Liljenquist and Galinsky say they controlled for the good-mood effect by giving participants in the second experiment a mood-screening questionnaire. They also say their results are consistent with existing written material on cleanliness and morality. For instance, in one of Liljenquist’s earlier studies, she found, among other things, that cleaning hands after writing about a moral violation made people feel less guilty about it. Other researchers have also tackled the issue of morality and smell, but from the opposite end of the scope. A paper published last year in the Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin revealed that people are more critical and judgmental about certain moral issues when exposed to the vapors of a smelly-scented spray.
Yes, a smelly-scented spray is a commercially available product. By the way, according to a psychologist who has worked with it in experiments, it is nearly impossible to get rid of it.
Orange-scented Windex certainly makes for a nicer lab environment, which perhaps has something to do with Liljenquist’s continued interest in this line of study. "Research on how to stay on the moral high ground and promote virtue," she says, "is something I find refreshing. " [br] The broken-windows theory of crime control assumed that if a neighborhood is well managed, ______.
选项
A、potential wrongdoers would be dissuaded from breaking windows.
B、psychologist would suggest people behave morally.
C、it is less likely that people would commit crime there.
D、it would smei1 as clean as it looks.
答案
C
解析
根据题干关键词broken-windows theory,neighborhood,well managed定位到原文第一段第一 句:...the broken-windows theory...assumed that if a neighborhood looked orderly and cared for—with no broken windows—potential wrongdoers would be dissuaded from committing crimes there.可知如果一个社区管理得井井有条,没有破窗,那么罪犯就可能不在那儿犯罪,C)项符合文意。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3449439.html
相关试题推荐
Sincewearesocialbeings,thequalityofourlivesdependsinlargemeasur
Sincewearesocialbeings,thequalityofourlivesdependsinlargemeasur
Sincewearesocialbeings,thequalityofourlivesdependsinlargemeasur
Sincewearesocialbeings,thequalityofourlivesdependsinlargemeasur
Sincewearesocialbeings,thequalityofourlivesdependsinlargemeasur
Sincewearesocialbeings,thequalityofourlivesdependsinlargemeasur
[originaltext]Aperson’ssocialprestigeseemstobedeterminedmainlybyh
[originaltext]Student:Excuseme,Mr.Ma,Iamdoingasurveyforasocialstud
[originaltext]Student:Excuseme,Mr.Ma,Iamdoingasurveyforasocialstud
[originaltext]Student:Excuseme,Mr.Ma,Iamdoingasurveyforasocialstud
随机试题
采用铰制孔螺栓承受横向载荷时,螺栓杆受到()作用。A.扭转和弯曲 B.拉伸
已知某土粒比重为2.75,天然重度为1.65,含水量为25%,则该土的孔隙率、孔
资产评估法规定评估行业协会的职责有( )。A、制定会员自律管理办法,对会员实行自
请阅读材料,并回答相关问题。 先行组织者是美国教育心理学家奥苏贝尔于1960年
既能清热解毒,又能疏散风热的药物是( )。A.连翘 B.薄荷 C.紫花地丁
可研末冲服的药物是A.小茴香B.高良姜C.丁香D.附子E.吴茱萸
各种运输方式内外部的各个方面的构成和联系,就是( )。 A.运输系统
诚然,我们的民族经历了难以计数的____,可是中华民族顽强不屈的精气神和自信力从
甲乙双方签订一份场外期权合约,在合约基准日确定甲现有的资产组合为100个指数点。
一般资料:男,32岁,已婚.部门经理。求助问题:开会发言紧张,伴失眠两个月。案例
最新回复
(
0
)