Today’s blog
entry is a verbatim Press Release from the National Science Foundation dated 02/27/2012.
Although I consider myself a leading national expert in Deceptology, I could add
nothing to this amazing report.
NEW STUDIES
DETERMINE WHICH SOCIAL CLASS MORE LIKELY TO BEHAVE UNETHICALLY
Press
Release, NSF, Media Contact: Bobbie Mixon, NSF, (703) 292-8485, bmixon@nsf.gov
A series of
studies conducted by psychologists at the University of California, Berkeley
and the University of Toronto in Canada reveal something the well off may not
want to hear. Individuals who are relatively high in social class are more
likely to engage in a variety of unethical behaviors.
That is the
finding of new research published in today's Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences and it's a doozy.
"Our
studies suggest that more positive attitudes toward greed and the pursuit of
self-interest among upper-class individuals, in part, drive their tendencies
toward increased unethical behavior," said lead researcher Paul Piff of UC
Berkeley.
The research
revealed that relative to the lower class, upper-class individuals are more
likely to break the law while driving, more likely to exhibit unethical
decision-making tendencies, more likely to take valued goods from others, more
likely to lie in a negotiation, more likely to cheat to increase their chances
of winning a prize and more likely to endorse unethical behavior at work.
"The
relative privilege and security enjoyed by upper-class individuals give rise to
independence from others and a prioritization of the self and one's own welfare
over the welfare of others--what we call 'greed,'" explained Piff, whose
research was funded in part by a National Science Foundation Graduate Research
Fellowship.
"This
is likely to cause someone to be more inclined to break the rules in his or her
favor, or to perceive themselves as, in a sense, being 'above the law,'"
he said and therefore become more prone to committing unethical behavior.
Piff and
colleagues conducted seven survey, experimental and naturalistic studies to
determine which social class is more likely to behave in unethical ways--to
engage in behaviors that have important consequences for society such as
cheating, deception or breaking the law.
In two
naturalistic field studies that examined unethical behavior on the road,
researchers were surprised by the differences between upper and lower class
individuals. They found "upper-class drivers" were significantly more
likely to pursue their own self-interests and break the law while driving than
were "lower-class drivers."
Piff and his
team found drivers of higher-end automobiles were four times more likely to cut
off other vehicles before waiting their turn at a busy, four-way intersection
with stop signs on all sides. In addition, they found upper-class drivers were
significantly more likely to drive through a crosswalk without yielding to a
waiting pedestrian.
For these
studies, the researchers defined social class by an observable cultural symbol
of social class--namely, the car one drives.
In another
laboratory study more directly related to greed, researchers found upper-class
individuals were more likely to cheat in a game to improve their chances of
winning a cash prize. In this study, Piff and colleagues measured social class
using the MacArthur scale of subjective socioeconomic status, where
participants rank themselves on a 10-rung ladder relative to others in society
in terms of their wealth, education and the prestige of their jobs.
Participants
then played a "game of chance" in which a computer
"randomly" presented them with one side of a six-sided die on five
separate rolls. Researchers told participants higher rolls would increase their
chances of winning a cash prize and were asked to report their total score at
the end of the game. In fact, die rolls were pre-determined to sum up to 12.
The extent to which participants reported a total exceeding 12 served as a
direct behavioral measure of cheating.
Greed
"is a robust determinant of unethical behavior," the researchers
write in the report. "Plato and Aristotle deemed greed to be at the root
of personal immorality, arguing that greed drives desires for material gain at
the expense of ethical standards." For this study, the researchers
conclude that, in part, due to their more favorable beliefs about greed,
upper-class individuals are more willing to deceive and cheat others for personal
gain.
"Study
4 is also intriguing," said Piff. Study 4 sought to provide experimental
evidence that the experience of higher social class has a causal effect on
unethical decision-making and behavior. It was the only study in which
researchers manipulated participants into temporarily feeling either higher or
lower in social class rank to test whether these feelings actually caused
people to behave more or less unethically.
At the end
of the study, the experimenter presented participants with a jar of
individually wrapped candies, ostensibly for children in a nearby laboratory,
but informed them that they could take some if they wanted. This task served as
a measure of unethical behavior because taking candy would reduce the amount
that would otherwise be given to children.
People in
this study, who were made to feel higher in social class rank, took
approximately two times as much candy from children than did people who were
made to feel lower in social class rank.
"Across
all seven studies, the general pattern we find is that as a person's social
class increases, his or her tendency to behave unethically also
increases," said Piff.
Joining Piff
in the research were Daniel M. Stancato, Rodolfo Mendoza-Denton and Dacher
Keltner of UC Berkeley and Stéphane Côté of the University of Toronto.
1 comment:
Anyone who has driven a call in Potomac, MD knows the arrogant rich driver syndrome.
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