Don’t
worry. This isn’t about soul-searching and trying to find answers to
existential questions like, ‘Who am I?’ or ‘What is my purpose?’ or ‘How should
I live my life?’
Nope.
This is about a science experiment!
Ian
Krajbich of Ohio State University and Fadong Chen of Zhejiang University in
China wanted to better understand how people made social decisions, according
to a paper they published in Nature
Communications. They began with the premise that “Social decisions
typically involve conflicts between selfishness and pro-sociality.”
Then,
they asked 200 students in the United States and Germany to play “mini-dictator
games in which subjects make binary decisions about how to allocate money
between themselves and another participant.”
Science Daily explained, “In some cases, participants had to decide
within two seconds how they would share their money as opposed to other cases,
when they were forced to wait at least 10 seconds before deciding. And, in
additional scenarios, they were free to choose at their own pace, which was
usually more than two seconds but less than 10.”
The
upshot was people who were pro-social became more pro-social, and people with
more selfish instincts became more selfish, under severe time constraints.
Given more time, “pro-social subjects became marginally less pro-social under
time delay…while selfish subjects became less selfish under time delay…though
these effects are less pronounced.”
Maybe
you behave most like you when you’re pressed for time.
WOMACK
INVESTMENT ADVISERS, INC.
Oklahoma / Main Office: 1366 E. 15th Street - Edmond, OK 73013
California Office: 4660 La Jolla Village Dr., Ste. 100 - San Diego, CA 92122
Phone (405) 340-1717 - Toll Free (877) 340-1717
Oklahoma / Main Office: 1366 E. 15th Street - Edmond, OK 73013
California Office: 4660 La Jolla Village Dr., Ste. 100 - San Diego, CA 92122
Phone (405) 340-1717 - Toll Free (877) 340-1717
Website: www.womackadvisers.com
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