Source - http://www.upi.com/
By - Press Release
Category - Hotel Near Sports Venues
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans
By - Press Release
Category - Hotel Near Sports Venues
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans
Hotel Near Sports Venues |
U.S. researchers find people are
biologically responsive to taking pleasure in the pain of others --
Schadenfreude -- at least if they envy them.
Mina Cikara of the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Susan Fiske of Princeton
University measured the electrical activity of cheek muscles with an
electromyogram, which captures the electrical activity of facial
movements when an individual smiles.
Participants were shown
photographs of individuals associated with different stereotypes: the
elderly (pity), students or Americans (pride), drug addicts (disgust)
and rich professionals (envy).
These images were then paired with
everyday events such as: "Won five dollars" (positive) or "Got soaked
by a taxi" (negative) or "Went to the bathroom" (neutral). Participants
were asked how this would make them feel, and their facial movements
were recorded.
"Because people don't like to report envy of
Schadenfreude, this was the best method for gathering such responses.
And, in this experiment, we were able to viscerally capture malicious
glee," Fiske said. "We found that people did smile more in response to
negative than positive events, but only for groups they envied."
In
a second study, participants viewed the same photographs and events as
the first study and were asked to rate how they felt on a scale of 1-9.
Similar
results emerged: Participants felt the worst about positive events and
the best about negative events in regards to the rich professionals, the
study said.
"A lack of empathy is not always pathological. It's a
human response, and not everyone experiences this, but a significant
portion does," Cikara said. "If you think about the way workplaces and
organizations are set up, for example, it raises an interesting
question: Is competition the best way to get your employees to produce?
It's possible, in some circumstances, that competition is good. In other
ways, people might be preoccupied with bringing other people down, and
that's not what an organization wants."
The findings were reported in the Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.
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