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bananas

(27,509 posts)
Sun Feb 16, 2014, 04:12 AM Feb 2014

Money May Corrupt, but Thinking About Time Can Strengthen Morality

http://www.psychologicalscience.org/index.php/news/releases/money-may-corrupt-but-thinking-about-time-can-strengthen-morality.html

PRESS RELEASE
December 10, 2013
For Immediate Release
Contact: Anna Mikulak
Association for Psychological Science
202.293.9300
amikulak@psychologicalscience.org

Money May Corrupt, but Thinking About Time Can Strengthen Morality

Priming people to think about money makes them more likely to cheat, but priming them to think about time seems to strengthen their moral compass, according to new research published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

The research, conducted by psychological scientists Francesca Gino of Harvard Business School and Cassie Mogilner of The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, shows that implicitly activating the concept of time reduces cheating behavior by encouraging people to engage in self-reflection.

High-profile cases of fraud, scams, and other unethical behavior provide regular fodder for the 24-hour news cycle. But most unethical behavior is much more mundane:

“Less attention is given to the more prevalent ‘ordinary’ unethical behavior carried out by people who value and care about morality but behave unethically when faced with an opportunity to cheat,” says Gino.

Gino and Mogilner wondered whether boosting self-reflection might be one way to encourage people to follow their moral compass.

Across four experiments, the researchers had participants complete various tasks — including word scrambles, searches for song lyrics, and counting tasks — designed to implicitly activate the concept of money, time, or something neutral.

Participants then worked on supposedly unrelated puzzles, reporting how many puzzles they had solved at the end. The researchers incentivized performance, providing additional money for each puzzle the participants solved. Participants could easily cheat by overstating their performance because the puzzle worksheets seemed to be anonymous, and they were recycled at the end of the task.

What the participants didn’t know was that each worksheet had a unique number on it, allowing the researchers to compare how many puzzles the participants actually solved to how many they said they solved.

The results were clear: Disposing people to think about money seemed to make them cheat.

In the first experiment, 87.5% of the participants primed to think of money cheated on the puzzles, compared to only 66.7% of those participants primed with neutral words. They also cheated to a greater extent, artificially boosting their scores by a greater margin than the other participants.

Thinking about time, on the other hand, seemed to prevent people from cheating: Only 42.4% of the participants primed with the concept of time overstated their performance on the task.

Data from subsequent experiments showed that the link between money and cheating, and between time and cheating, could be explained by self-reflection (or lack thereof).

Priming the concept of time seems to lead people “to notice that how they spend their time sums up to their life as a whole, encouraging them to act in ways they can be proud of when holding up this mirror to who they are,” the researchers write.

While time may be an important tool in keeping us on the straight and narrow, preliminary data collected by Gino and Mogilner suggest that people tend to pay more attention to money.

“These new findings show the benefits of doing just the opposite: thinking about time rather than money,” says Gino. “Our results suggest that finding ways to nudge people to reflect on the self at the time of temptation, rather than on the potential rewards they can accrue by cheating, may be an effective way to curb dishonesty.”

###

For more information about this study, please contact: Francesca Gino at fgino@hbs.edu.
The APS journal Psychological Science is the highest ranked empirical journal in psychology. For a copy of the article "Time, Money, and Morality" and access to other Psychological Science research findings, please contact Anna Mikulak at 202-293-9300 or amikulak@psychologicalscience.org.


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Money May Corrupt, but Thinking About Time Can Strengthen Morality (Original Post) bananas Feb 2014 OP
Good. Bookmarking for more reading tomorrow. And I agree with it. n/t freshwest Feb 2014 #1
Moral and ethical behavior is just long-term pragmatism. bemildred Feb 2014 #2
That's an excellent way of putting it. bananas Feb 2014 #6
That is certainly one dimension. kristopher Feb 2014 #7
K&R Solly Mack Feb 2014 #3
K&R yortsed snacilbuper Feb 2014 #4
Recommend.n/t Jefferson23 Feb 2014 #5

bananas

(27,509 posts)
6. That's an excellent way of putting it.
Sun Feb 16, 2014, 09:55 PM
Feb 2014
Moral and ethical behavior is just long-term pragmatism.

What goes around, comes around.

kristopher

(29,798 posts)
7. That is certainly one dimension.
Mon Feb 17, 2014, 04:57 PM
Feb 2014

But since the reward you are implying is far to indirect to be an actual motivator, I'd tend to believe that it goes beyond performance for a reward. The elements of empathy and self worth would seem to me to have a more important role than the survival function I believe your reference to pragmatism points toward.

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