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Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

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Money changes everything

Posted: Thursday, November 16, 2006 8:58 PM by Alan Boyle

It might seem obvious that dwelling on money (or lack thereof) makes people focus more on themselves and less on others – after all, even the Bible says the love of money is the root of all evil. But is that the square root or the cube root? Experiments detailed in this week’s issue of Science quantify how thinking about money, even subliminally, affects our behavior for good or for evil.

The researchers behind the study - University of Minnesota marketing professor Kathleen Vohs, Florida State University graduate student Nicole Mead and University of British Columbia doctoral student Miranda Good - started out with the proposition that thinking about money leads people to behave more self-sufficiently and less cooperatively. So they designed nine psychological experiments aimed at testing whether reminders of money would lead people to focus more on their individual tasks and less on what others were up to.

In some cases, the references to money were built into the experiment: For example, some subjects were asked to put together phrases like "a high-paying salary." Others read essays about growing up rich or poor, or played a game of Monopoly. Sometimes the reminders were more subliminal: Subjects filled out questionnaires while they sat in front of a computer screen that displayed dollar bills floating past, or worked at desk facing a poster showing different denominations of currency.

The experiments' control groups did the same tasks, but without encountering references to money. The screensaver showed fish floating past, or the poster showed a flower garden.

The point of each experiment wasn't usually the task itself, but how the references to money changed the way people behaved as they did the task.

The money-conscious groups consistently worked longer at their individual tasks than the control groups (or the people who read about growing up poor). But they also put less effort into helping out others, based on manufactured situations where assistance was requested.

For example, they donated an average of 77 cents to a "University Student Fund," compared with $1.34 for the control group. When a box of pencils was spilled "accidentally" on the floor, they picked up an average of 18 pencils, compared with 20 for the control group. They even kept their chairs farther away from each other (118 inches vs. 80 inches for the control group).

In all, about 450 people participated in the experiments, Vohs said. "We found no differences as a function of country of origin, no differences between men and women, no differences with respect to whether they grew up with wealthy or meager resources," she told me today.

The bottom line is that dwelling on money changes things for better or for worse, depending on the situation. Here's how the researchers put it in the last paragraph of their Science paper:

"The self-sufficient pattern helps explain why people view money as both the greatest good and evil. As countries and cultures developed, money may have allowed people to acquire goods and services that enabled the pursuit of cherished goals, which in turn diminished reliance on friends and family. In this way, money enhanced individualism but diminished communal motivations, an effect that is still apparent in people's responses to money today."

Is there any way to put this philosophy to practical use?

"Certainly you can use these results to one's advantage," Vohs observed. "As a business owner or a manager, if you would like people to work cooperatively on a project, you would be better served by minimizing the references to money. But on a personal level, if you want to motivate yourself to achieve a goal, you might want to use that concept of money."

It doesn't even have to be real money.

"It's the mere presence of money or the activation of the concept of money, but it wasn't anything about earning money, it wasn't about rewards, it wasn't about salaries," she said. "It was about activating the concept of money, even at a level that's beneath awareness."

So let's say you'd like your teenage daughter to be more diligent about cleaning her room or doing her homework. Could you get away with putting up a poster or giving her a screensaver rather than promising to raise her allowance?

Vohs chuckled at that, but agreed that "it doesn't have to be about the attainment of money, just monetary reminders." Now she and her colleagues are looking at how to apply that insight in the real world. "One of my next goals is to look at vulnerable populations, like the elderly, and see if we can promote self-sufficiency for them," she said.

And that finding - about the power of money as a concept as well as hard currency - might not be so obvious. "I certainly don't think that it was something everyone knew about."

For more perspectives on the research, you can check out the news releases from the University of Minnesota and Florida State University, as well as The Associated Press' story and this report from ScienceNow, the journal Science's news site.

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Comments

Why would you want to promote self sufficiency in the elderly by subjecting them to money? I believe you should attempt to motivate people who whould rather accept a hand out then work for a pay check. The elderly have spent their whole working lives earning and spending money. Maybe your experiment would be better served in testing a group of people who have not been motivated in the past
It's a poorly structured experiment that assumes only a certain group of people think about money with the proper stimuli and another group does not because of the absense of monetary stimuli. Well, duh, issues about money are everywhere. And guess what?!?! They are not going away.
I totally agree with John Salazar about testing a sort of "welfare" group with money. And perhaps there might be some other concept in which to subject the elderly, such as something in the "health" area. After all, that is why at least some elderly are usually not self sufficient. A good example is my own father who is self sufficient in money, but is about to become dependent upon others if his health gets worse. Something to "subject" him to stay healthy might help.
Self-sufficiency is attained when one is balanced in their providing for the outer self (money) and the inner Self (inner value awareness). As we have seen with the elderly, the outer self-sufficiency has been overly-developed at the expense of the inner value awarenes. When the standards of inner values and peace is paramount in an individual, the possibilities are endless. It is forever true that the Quality of a thing lies within and can rarely ever be seen but felt/known. Quantity (money, things) on the other hand is sought after very often at the expense of one's inner root/values.....
I submit that its not even money in general that effects oneself but if people are living in an environment where most others are benefitting greatly and others are not ;and the cost of living has gone up due to the more wealthys expenditures. For examplein the 40s and 50s everybody was struggling financially and so everyone was poorbut they felt comfortable in thier environment. But as the world has moved too fast and some acquireing great wealth sometimes with corruption and many are left behind with no way out that one feels a sense of helplessness and poverty. All one has to do is look at the situation in Afghanistan to see this. Thet are growing Opium AGAIN BECAUSE THEY HAVE NO JOBS!
"One of my next goals is to look at vulnerable populations, like the elderly, and see if we can promote self-sufficiency for them," (Vohs) said. No, take my brother-in-law (PLEASE!) and other non-self-sufficient populations that won't take care of themselves.
The Bible is Wrong.. SELFISHNESS is the root of ALL evil.
When Dave finds that "subliminal encouragement to health" I hope he'll tell the world about it. In the meantime, he might try a little overt encouragement. Perhaps his father needs a little of Dave's time more than money. Sonja, The LOVE of money (which is what the Bible really says) is usually related to selfishness, as the study above also indicated.
The "love of money" is not just an isolated 'thing' unto itself. The love of money produces bondage, it predominates in our relationships, it fills one's head with price-tags and arithmetic, it deprives us of genuine free-time and leisure (gotta 'work'), it seduces our consciousness, it steals our lives and our souls. It turns us into predatory 'survivors' as members of the 'chain-gang of profanity' that refuses to embrace the instructions that are printed on our (US) money...."In God We Trust". The love of money is the mantra of the Cult of Judas. Perhaps that is why only dead people can have their images on our currency.... a reminder of the perpetual relative 'death' that is produced by refusing to trust in the divine to provide for us....the slavery of the chickens who refuse to cross the road and remain secretly frozen by the terror of their own subconscious fears. Perhaps this is why whenever we have some money we do everything that we can to get rid of it!
The only true medium of exchange we have is time. All others arise from time. Time premits us to create both value and material objects. To truly understand money we have to understand what it symbolically represents as a value.....of time. Only then can we start to consciously ask ourselves..... is this (or that) use of my time really worth it? How do you value your time in this life? That is the important question! James James
والله ما عندك سالفه


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