Researchers found a simple trick to get people to hand over money, even when they don't have to
AP/Ted S. Warren
A notice nearby asked drinkers to pay a small fee for their beverages-30 pence for tea, 50 pence for coffee, and 10 pence for milk-but the pile of coins inside the honesty box accumulated slowly, while tea, coffee, and milk supplies shrank rapidly.
Something needed to be done, and three academics in the department decided to tackle the problem using the best tool at their disposal: a research intervention.
As students of human behavior, they recognized that people are guided by weak moral compasses that function much more effectively under surveillance. Unfortunately, honesty box contributions were anonymous, and it would have been expensive and overzealous to install a camera.
Instead of forcing everyone to comply under the gaze of constant surveillance, the researchers devised an intervention that merely made people feel as though they were being watched. During a ten-week period, they displayed ten different pictures above the price list for one week each, alternating between images of a pair of eyes and images of flowers.
When the image featured a collection of flowers, drinkers paid an average of only 15 pence per liter of milk consumed, whereas they paid 42 pence per liter when the image displayed a pair of eyes.
The mere suggestion that someone was watching compelled drinkers to contribute nearly three times more cash to the honesty box. Two hundred miles south of Newcastle, the West Midlands police department was justifiably curious about the research.
The department was responsible for policing Birmingham, the second-largest city in the U.K., and the Newcastle University intervention appeared to be both inexpensive and effective.
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Local officers described the campaign as a great triumph, claiming a 17 percent reduction in robberies, and swiftly launched its sequel: Operation Momentum 2.
As French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre noted sixty years ago, as soon as we imagine we're being watched, we start to notice how we're behaving, and we begin to imagine how other people might respond if they were watching.
We're far more forgiving of our own moral shortcomings- like failing to pay a small sum for tea and coffee-than we imagine other people might be, so the same acts that seem appropriate in isolation seem unacceptable when viewed from an observer's perspective.
Today few of us spend more than a few hours alone, so our thoughts and actions come to reflect the presence of the family, friends, and strangers who surround us.
So much of the way we think and behave is molded by these interactions with others that it becomes very difficult to imagine the people we'd become during a week, a month, or even a year of social isolation.
For small groups of people across time, that hypothetical has become a temporary or permanent reality, and the results have almost always been alarming.
From Drunk Tank Pink: And Other Unexpected Forces that Shape How We Think, Feel, and Behave by Adam Alter, published on March 21, 2013 by Penguin Press, an imprint of Penguin Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC. Copyright © Adam Alter, 2013.
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