What people say # what people do

نویسنده

  • Jeroen J. G. van Merrienboer
چکیده

suggesting that the higher status of the experimenter elicits physiological adaptations that reduce sensitivity to pain. Second, researchers may easily forget that the relationship between attitudes and behaviour is weak [2]. When we ask people what they think about separating waste (separate disposal of paper, glass, plastic etc.), many of them will say they are in favour of it. And when we ask people what they think of wind energy, again many of them will say they are in favour of it. This is really their attitude, meaning that they are not ‘lying’ to the experimenter but giving their trustworthy opinion. Yet, we would be making a big mistake if we concluded that these people will indeed separate their waste or accept a wind turbine in their neighbourhood. Many of the people who are in favour of separating waste will not do so, simply because it is not part of their daily behavioural routines. And many of the people who are in favour of wind energy may protest when a wind turbine is planned in their own neighbourhood, something called the NIMBY syndrome (Not In My Back Yard). Third, many cognitive processes are largely unconscious or intuitive (also called type 1 processes; [3]), and when we ask people to reflect on these processes they will often ‘construct’ plausible answers. Again, they really believe in their answers but nevertheless they are not in line with their actual behaviour. In a recent study, for example, we asked experienced radiologists how they visually studied X-rays in order to reach a diagnosis [4]. Most of them said they used ‘systematic viewing’, ensuring that all parts of the image are carefully inspected in a systematic fashion and thus yielding full coverage of the image. This is also the way they teach visual diagnosis to their students. Interestingly, eye-tracking data showed that this is not what expert radiologists actually do; compared with students, they use more systematic viewing but show less coverage because I am writing this letter because I am worried about the increasing use of subjective data in the field of Health Professions Education, including publications in Perspectives on Medical Education. Let me first state that there is nothing wrong with the use of subjective data as such. It is clearly the best way to go for answering research questions dealing with opinions, perceptions and feelings. Asking people ‘what they think’, ‘how they see things’ and ‘how they feel’ then yields valuable data. But it is wrong to think that all research questions can be reliably answered on the basis of such subjective data. When we are interested in behaviour and cognitive processes, subjective data are often not reliable and may even be misleading. Let me give three reasons for this. First, participants are often inclined to ‘please the experimenter’. As soon as an experimenter sits in a room with his or her participants, gives them a task and watches them intently, they will start saying what they think the experimenter expects from them. The characteristics of the experimenter may also influence how participants will act during the experiment, a phenomenon known as ‘experimenter bias.’ This bias might even have a biological basis. For example, in one study participants were asked to rate their pain tolerance and pain unpleasantness [1]. When the experimenter was a high-status university professor they indicated higher pain tolerance and lower pain unpleasantness than when the experimenter was a low-status research assistant. Interestingly, blood pressure reactivity mediated the relation between experimenter status and pain tolerance,

برای دانلود متن کامل این مقاله و بیش از 32 میلیون مقاله دیگر ابتدا ثبت نام کنید

ثبت نام

اگر عضو سایت هستید لطفا وارد حساب کاربری خود شوید

منابع مشابه

What do you say after you say "hello".

Introducing a new hobby for other people may inspire them to join with you. Reading, as one of mutual hobby, is considered as the very easy hobby to do. But, many people are not interested in this hobby. Why? Boring is the reason of why. However, this feel actually can deal with the book and time of you reading. Yeah, one that we will refer to break the boredom in reading is choosing what do yo...

متن کامل

National Curriculum: What Do International Experiences Say?

The conceptions, practices and efforts of some education systems in ten countries and four continents of the world, in area of national curriculum, have been reviewed and analyzed in this inquiry to represent a brief look of their experiences and obtain some guidelines for delineating and developing national curriculum. The methodology in this inquiry has been descriptive and analytical researc...

متن کامل

Determinants of Subjective Well-Being; Do We Really Know What Makes People Happy? : A Study Among Rasht Dwellers as a Metropolis in North of Iran

Recently, along with traditional economic indicators, policymakers are increasingly dealing with subjective well-being (SWB) as an evaluation criterion of their performance and as an index for the population’s psychology health. This study tries to define different determinants of SWB with a focus on some specific aspects of the living area. Also, this article investigates outskirt-urban differ...

متن کامل

What Do Voices Say in The Garden Party? An Analysis of Voices in the Persian Translation of Mansfield's Short Story

This study aims at investigating voices in the Persian translation of Katherine Mansfield's The Garden Party. In so doing, after a stylistic analysis of the voices in the original is done, it is argued by the authors that the polyphonous nature of the story is to a great extent due to the deployment of various sociolects in the story as well as the choice of Free Indirect Discourse (FID) as the...

متن کامل

Voice as Data: Learning from What People Say

Development is fundamentally about understanding people, their Motivations, behaviors and reactions. We have two primary means of understanding people— observing what they do, and what they say. As the AI4D community has noted, people’s increased use of mobile devices has led to a wealth of new data relevant to these topics. We are on the cusp of developing incredibly powerful tools that can he...

متن کامل

Do as we say and as we do: the interplay of descriptive and injunctive group norms in the attitude-behaviour relationship.

Past research on the social identity approach to attitude-behaviour relations has operationalized group norms as a mixture of both descriptive information (i.e. what most people do themselves) and injunctive information (i.e. what most people approve of). Two experiments (Study 1=185 participants; Study 2=238 participants) were conducted to tease apart the relative effects of descriptive and in...

متن کامل

ذخیره در منابع من


  با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید

برای دانلود متن کامل این مقاله و بیش از 32 میلیون مقاله دیگر ابتدا ثبت نام کنید

ثبت نام

اگر عضو سایت هستید لطفا وارد حساب کاربری خود شوید

عنوان ژورنال:

دوره 4  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2015