Are Your Values Right or
Left? The Answer Is More Literal Than You Think
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/04/110413151643.htm
ScienceDaily (Apr. 13, 2011) — Up equals good, happy,
optimistic; down the opposite. Right is honest and trustworthy. Left, not so
much. That's what language and culture tell us. "We use mental metaphors
to structure our thinking about abstract things," says psychologist Daniel
Casasanto, "One of those metaphors is space."
But we don't all think right is right, Casasanto has found.
Rather, "people associate goodness with the side they can act more
fluently on." Right-handed people prefer the product, job applicant, or
extraterrestrial positioned to their right. Lefties march to a left-handed
drummer. And those linguistic tropes? They probably "enshrine the
preferences of the right-handed majority."
Casasanto, of The New School for Social Research, and
Evangelia G. Chrysikou, of the University of Pennsylvania, wanted to find the
causes of these correlations. Does motor experience "give rise to these
preferences, or are they hardwired in the brain?" If the former, "how
flexible are these preferences? How much motor experience does it take" to
instill them?
Their surprising findings are published in Psychological
Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.
To investigate the first question, the researchers recruited
13 right-handed patients who'd suffered cerebral injuries that weakened or
paralyzed one side of their bodies. Five remained right-handed. The rest lost
their right side and became effectively left-handed. The patients were shown a
cartoon of a character's head between two empty boxes and told that he loves
zebras and thinks they are good, but hates pandas and thinks they're bad (or
vice versa). Then they were asked to say which animal they preferred and which
box, left or right, they'd put it in.
All the patients who were still right-handed put the
"good" animal in the right box. All but one of the new lefties put it
in the left.
Could these results be explained by neural rewiring? To rule
out that possibility, the researchers experimented with 53 healthy righties.
They asked 26 to wear a ski glove on the left hand and 27 on the right. The
experimenters attached the other glove to the same wrist, letting it dangle. In
a putative dexterity test, participants were instructed to pull dominos from a
box, two at a time using one hand for each, and place them symmetrically on
dots spaced across a table. If a domino fell, they were to set it aright with
the appropriate hand only.
They were then escorted to another room and administered
three questionnaires (two fillers), supposedly irrelevant to the first task. In
one, the participants performed the same animal-box task as the brain-injured
patients.
Three-quarters of those with ungloved right hands put the
good animal in the right box, two-thirds of the temporary lefties in the left.
How much motor experience did it take to switch their loyalties? About 12 minutes'
worth.
What does it all mean? "People generally believe that their judgments are rational and their concepts are stable," says Casasanto. "But if a few minutes of gentle training can flip our judgments about what's good or bad, then perhaps the mind is more malleable than people think."
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