Study: Money Affects Human Interaction
Money May Give People The Incentive To Work Harder, But Their Personal Relationships May Suffer
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(AP)
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Special Report Money Matters Get words to the wise, from the wise, on handling, making and saving money.
Most everyone agrees that having money is a good thing. What is less clear is how it affects people psychologically. A group of researchers from the University of Minnesota, Florida State University, and University of British Columbia wanted to find out how money might affect people's performance and behavior toward one another.
They conducted a series of experiments in the lab in which participants were reminded of money in several different ways. During one reminder, participants played a game of Monopoly and received either $4,000 of play money, $200 of play money, or no play money. Other reminders asked people to think about having either abundant or very limited financial resources, organize phrases that were related or unrelated to money ("I cashed a check," or "I wrote the letter"), or sit near images of money or neutral objects.
The researchers found that being exposed to money led to big changes in people's actions. Those who had money on their minds were less inclined to help someone in need and more inclined to work alone than interact with others. And they tended to work longer on challenging tasks without asking for help.
The bottom line: money appears to have both positive and negative effects on our behavior. On the one hand, it encourages self-sufficiency and hard work; but on the other, it discourages some positive social interaction.
Although it may seem from this study that money makes people greedy or selfish, the authors say this isn't necessarily the case. "A selfish person likely would have immediately asked for help when given a tough assignment ... and would have rejected the notion of accepting more work than was necessary," they write in the June issue of Current Directions in Psychological Science.
Given the important role money appears to play in human behavior and performance, the authors say it would be helpful for researchers to conduct more studies evaluating its impact on human psychology.
By Stephanie Watson
Reviewed by Louise Chang
©2005-2008 WebMD, LLC. All rights reserved.
- The elite media think they are explaining the world to people who aren''t as smart as they are, because our lives are not all based on the almighty dollar like theirs are. They don''t understand that they are the stupid ones. Now if we could just take away their influence on the Presidential elections...
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- "Study: Money Affects Human Interaction"
Ya THINK?? - Reply to this comment
- It took a study to figure this out???
I can''t beleive parents spend thousands of dollars to send their kids to college to learn stuff their Grandparents could have told them for free. - Reply to this comment
- Who PAID for this study?
I feel better when I have a fat savings account than when I don''t. Would anyone disagree with that observation? I think not. - Reply to this comment




