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NEWS
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Psychology professor Dolores Albarracín
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Action as a goal may be too broad, new research suggests |
A series of experiments conducted by researchers at the University of
Illinois suggest that society’s emphasis on action over inaction
may lead to unforeseen consequences.
“Our research highlights how the pressures of society to be
active may produce fairly unregulated behavior,” said Dolores
Albarracín, a professor of psychology who led the work.
The new analysis appears this month in the Journal of Personality and
Social Psychology. According to Albarracín, the findings could
help understand how common words used in everyday life may influence
conditions such as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and bipolar
disorder. While such conditions have genetic roots, Albarracín
said, the social and cultural factors that exacerbate them are not well
understood.
In a series of experiments, researchers primed participants with a set
of words suggesting action or inaction and then observed their
behavior. The primes list consisted of words such as “go”
and “motivation” that represented an active thought, or
words like “rest” and “stop” that indicated
inaction.
In previous studies, Albarracín said, behavior and stimulus were
always tightly linked. For example, participants primed to be hungry
would eat more. In this research, however, Albarracín noted that
the association between the word primes and outcomes was very weak.
In the new analysis, Albarracín and colleagues subjected
participants to different sets of word primes and then asked them to
perform a task. The tasks ranged from doodling to eating, and in some
cases, learning new information. The intensity of the behavior was
measured, and in two of the studies participants could choose to do
none of the tasks and instead rest.
The studies demonstrated that participants primed with an action word
were more likely to choose active tasks. But what was most compelling
to Albarracín was that the same stimulus triggered a diverse
array of tasks that are normally not seen together, such as eating,
learning and doodling. The researchers successfully reproduced this
paradigm in the laboratory. In one setting, the active word prime
enhanced learning, but in a different context the same stimulus
encouraged participants to doodle or eat.
“What you actually end up promoting is a very general message to
be active,” Albarracín said. “You can be active by
exercising or learning, but you can also be active by driving fast or
taking drugs. That is the danger of a global message to be
active.”
The studies suggest that it is important to provide more specific cues
about how to be active. It also rings a note of caution about how
children are educated, Albarracín said.
“If you think about the number of activities that kids are
engaged in these days – going to school, playing the piano, etc.
– to what extent is this pattern desirable?”
Albarracín said. “Are you conveying that specific
activities are valuable or that being busy and active all the time is
what you are supposed to be doing?”
Psychology professor Dolores Albarracín conducted a
series of experiments that suggest society’s emphasis on action
over inaction may lead to unforeseen consequences.
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