New drugs may help to enhance people’s mental powers (see article). But a study carried out by Pamela Smith, of Radboud University Nijmegen in the Netherlands, and her colleagues suggests a less pharmacological approach can be taken, too. Their work, just published in Psychological Science, argues that simply putting someone into a weak social position impairs his cognitive function. Conversely, ’empowering’ him, in the dread jargon of sociology, sharpens up his mind. Dr Smith focused on those cognitive processes that help people maintain and pursue their goals in difficult and distracting situations. She suspected that a lack of social power may reduce someone’s ability to keep track of information and make plans to achieve his goals. To explore this theory, she carried out three tests. In the first, participants were divided at random into groups of superiors and subordinates. They were told that the superiors would direct and evaluate the subordinates and that this evaluation would determine the subordinates’ payment for the experiment. Superiors were paid a fixed amount. The subordinates were then divided into two further groups: powerless and empowered. A sense of powerlessness was instilled, the researchers hoped, by having participants write for several minutes about […]
Wednesday, May 28th, 2008
If You Are At The Bottom of the Heap, Mental Processes May Keep You There
Author:
Source: The Economist (U.K.)
Publication Date: May 22nd 2008
Link: If You Are At The Bottom of the Heap, Mental Processes May Keep You There
Source: The Economist (U.K.)
Publication Date: May 22nd 2008
Link: If You Are At The Bottom of the Heap, Mental Processes May Keep You There
Stephan: You would think it was obvious that the more secure and empowered each individual was the better for the entire society. You might think that. But you would be wrong. It seems an extraordinarily difficult concept for politicians to grasp.