Why do we do the things we do? Despite our best attempts to "know
thyself," the truth is that we often know astonishingly little about our
own minds, and even less about the way others think. As Charles
Dickens once put it, “A wonderful fact to reflect upon, that every human
creature is constituted to be that profound secret and mystery to every
other.”
Psychologists have long sought insights into how we perceive the world
and what motivates our behavior, and they've made enormous strides in
lifting that veil of mystery. Aside from providing fodder for stimulating
cocktail-party conversations, some of the most famous psychological
experiments of the past century reveal universal and often surprising
truths about human nature. Here are 10 classic psychological studies
that may change the way you understand yourself.
We all have some capacity for evil.
Arguably the most famous experiment in the history of psychology, the
1971 Stanford prison study put a microscope on how social situations can
affect human behavior. The researchers, led by psychologist Philip
Zimbardo, set up a mock prison in the basement of the Stanford psych
building and selected 24 undergraduates (who had no criminal record
and were deemed psychologically healthy) to act as prisoners and guards.
Researchers then observed the prisoners (who had to stay in the cells 24
hours a day) and guards (who shared eight-hour shifts) using hidden
cameras.
The experiment, which was scheduled to last for two weeks, had to be
cut short after just six days due to the guards' abusive behavior -- in
some cases they even inflicted psychological torture -- and the extreme
emotional stress and anxiety exhibited by the prisoners.
"The guards escalated their aggression against the prisoners, stripping
them naked, putting bags over their heads, and then finally had them
engage in increasingly humiliating sexual activities," Zimbardo told
American Scientist. "After six days I had to end it because it was out of
control -- I couldn't really go to sleep at night without worrying what the
guards could do to the prisoners."
We don't notice what's right in front of us.
Think you know what's going on around you? You might not be nearly
as aware as you think. In 1998, researchers from Harvard and Kent State
University targeted pedestrians on a college campus to determine how
much people notice about their immediate environments. In the
experiment, an actor came up to a pedestrian and asked for directions.
While the pedestrian was giving the directions, two men carrying a large
wooden door walked between the actor and the pedestrian, completely
blocking their view of each other for several seconds. During that time,
the actor was replaced by another actor, one of a different height and
build, and with a different outfit, haircut and voice. A full half of the
participants didn't notice the substitution.
The experiment was one of the first to illustrate the phenomenon of
"change blindness," which shows just how selective we are about what
we take in from any given visual scene -- and it seems that we rely on
memory and pattern-recognition significantly more than we might think.
Delaying gratification is hard -- but we're more
successful when we do.
A famous Stanford experiment from the late 1960s tested preschool
children's ability to resist the lure of instant gratification -- and it yielded
some powerful insights about willpower and self-discipline. In the
experiment, four-year-olds were put in a room by themselves with a
marshmallow on a plate in front of them, and told that they could either
eat the treat now, or if they waited until the researcher returned 15
minutes later, they could have two marshmallows.
While most of the children said they'd wait, they often struggled to resist
and then gave in, eating the treat before the researcher returned, TIME
reports. The children who did manage to hold off for the full 15 minutes
generally used avoidance tactics, like turning away or covering their
eyes. The implications of the children's behavior were significant: Those
who were able to delay gratification were much less likely to be obese, or
to have drug addiction or behavioral problems by the time they were
teenagers, and were more successful later in life.
We can experience deeply conflicting moral impulses.
A famous 1961 study by Yale psychologist Stanley Milgram tested (rather
alarmingly) how how far people would go to obey authority figures when
asked to harm others, and the intense internal conflict between personal
morals and the obligation to obey authority figures.
Milgram wanted to conduct the experiment to provide insight into how
Nazi war criminals could have perpetuated unspeakable acts during the
Holocaust. To do so, he tested a pair of participants, one deemed the
"teacher" and the other deemed the "learner." The teacher was instructed
to administer electric shocks to the learner (who was supposedly sitting
in another room, but in reality was not being shocked) each time they
got questions wrong. Milgram instead played recordings which made it
sound like the learner was in pain, and if the "teacher" subject expressed
a desire to stop, the experimenter prodded him to go on. During the first
experiment, 65 percent of participants administered a painful, final 450-
volt shock (labeled "XXX"), although many were visibly stressed and
uncomfortable about doing so.
While the study has commonly been seen as a warning of blind
obedience to authority, Scientific American recently revisited it, arguing
that the results were more suggestive of deep moral conflict.
"Human moral nature includes a propensity to be empathetic, kind and
good to our fellow kin and group members, plus an inclination to be
xenophobic, cruel and evil to tribal others," journalist Michael Shermer
wrote. "The shock experiments reveal not blind obedience but conflicting
moral tendencies that lie deep within."
Recently, some commenters have called Milgram's methodology into
question, and one critic noted that records of the experiment performed
at Yale suggested that 60 percent of participants actually disobeyed orders
to administer the highest-dosage shock.
We're easily corrupted by power.
There's a psychological reason behind the fact that those in power
sometimes act towards others with a sense of entitlement and disrespect.
A 2003 study published in the journal Psychological Review put students
into groups of three to write a short paper together. Two students were
instructed to write the paper, while the other was told to evaluate the
paper and determine how much each student would be paid. In the
middle of their work, a researcher brought in a plate of five cookies.
Although generally the last cookie was never eaten, the "boss" almost
always ate the fourth cookie -- and ate it sloppily, mouth open.
"When researchers give people power in scientific experiments, they are
more likely to physically touch others in potentially inappropriate ways,
to flirt in more direct fashion, to make risky choices and gambles, to
make first offers in negotiations, to speak their mind, and to eat cookies
like the Cookie Monster, with crumbs all over their chins and chests,"
psychologist Dacher Keltner, one of the study's leaders, wrote in an
article for UC Berkeley's Greater Good Science Center.
We seek out loyalty to social groups and are easily
drawn to intergroup conflict.
This classic 1950s social psychology experiment shined a light on the
possible psychological basis of why social groups and countries find
themselves embroiled in conflict with one another -- and how they can
learn to cooperate again.
Study leader Muzafer Sherif took two groups of 11 boys (all age 11) to
Robbers Cave State Park in Oklahoma for "summer camp." The groups
(named the "Eagles" and the "Rattlers") spent a week apart, having fun
together and bonding, with no knowledge of the existence of the other
group. When the two groups finally integrated, the boys started calling
each other names, and when they started competing in various games,
more conflict ensued and eventually the groups refused to eat together.
In the next phase of the research, Sherif designed experiments to try to
reconcile the boys by having them enjoy leisure activities together
(which was unsuccessful) and then having them solve a problem
together, which finally began to ease the conflict.
We only need one thing to be happy.
The 75-year Harvard Grant study --one of the most comprehensive
longitudinal studies ever conducted -- followed 268 male Harvard
undergraduates from the classes of 1938-1940 (now well into their 90s)
for 75 years, regularly collecting data on various aspects of their lives.
The universal conclusion? Love really is all that matters, at least when it
comes to determining long-term happiness and life satisfaction.
The study's longtime director, psychiatrist George Vaillant, told The
Huffington Post that there are two pillars of happiness: "One is love. The
other is finding a way of coping with life that does not push love away."
For example, one participant began the study with the lowest rating for
future stability of all the subjects and he had previously attempted
suicide. But at the end of his life, he was one of the happiest. Why? As
Vaillant explains, “He spent his life searching for love.”
We thrive when we have strong self-esteem and social
status.
Achieving fame and success isn't just an ego boost -- it could also be a
key to longevity, according to the notorious Oscar winners study.
Researchers from Toronto's Sunnybrook and Women's College Health
Sciences Centre found that Academy Award-winning actors and directors
tend to live longer than those who were nominated but lost, with
winning actors and actresses outliving their losing peers by nearly four
years.
"We are not saying that you will live longer if you win an Academy
Award," Donald Redelmeier, the lead author of the study, told ABC News.
"Or that people should go out and take acting courses. Our main
conclusion is simply that social factors are important ... It suggests that
an internal sense of self-esteem is an important aspect to health and
health care."
We constantly try to justify our experiences so that they make sense
to us.
Anyone who's taken a freshman Psych 101 class is familiar with
cognitive dissonance, a theory which dictates that human beings have a
natural propensity to avoid psychological conflict based on
disharmonious or mutually exclusive beliefs. In an often-cited 1959
experiment, psychologist Leon Festinger asked participants to perform a
series of dull tasks, like turning pegs in a wooden knob, for an hour.
They were then paid either $1 or $20 to tell a "waiting participant" (aka a
researcher) that the task was very interesting. Those who were paid $1 to
lie rated the tasks as more enjoyable than those who were paid $20. Their
conclusion? Those who were paid more felt that they had sufficient
justification for having performed the rote task for an hour, but those
who were only paid $1 felt the need to justify the time spent (and reduce
the level of dissonance between their beliefs and their behavior) by
saying that the activity was fun. In other words, we commonly tell
ourselves lies to make the world appear a more logical, harmonious
place.
We buy into stereotypes in a big way.
Stereotyping various groups of people based on social group, ethnicity or
class is something nearly all of us do, even if we make an effort not to --
and it can lead us to draw unfair and potentially damaging conclusions
about entire populations. NYU psychologist John Bargh's experiments on
"automaticity of social behavior" revealed that we often judge people
based on unconscious stereotypes -- and we can't help but act on them.
We also tend to buy into stereotypes for social groups that we see
ourselves being a part of. In one study, Bargh found that a group of
participants who were asked to unscramble words related to old age --
"Florida," "helpless" and "wrinkled" -- walked significantly slower down
the hallway after the experiment than the group who unscrambled words
unrelated to age. Bargh repeated the findings in two other comparable
studies that enforced stereotypes based on race and politeness.
"Stereotypes are categories that have gone too far," Bargh told Psychology
Today. "When we use stereotypes, we take in the gender, the age, the
color of the skin of the person before us, and our minds respond with
messages that say hostile, stupid, slow, weak. Those qualities aren't out
there in the environment. They don't reflect reality."
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