on 06-01-2013 07:39 PM
The social thermometer:
Temperature affects how we perceive relationships LANGUAGE contains many sayings which link our feelings and behaviour towards others to temperature. We might, for example, hold “warm feelings” for somebody, and extend them a “warm welcome”, while giving somebody else “the cold shoulder” or “an icy stare”. Why is that we have so many metaphors which relate temperature to social distance? According to George Lakoff, a professor of cognitive science and linguistics at the University of California, Berkeley, we judge others on the basis of warmth because abstract concepts, such as affection, are firmly grounded in bodily sensations. There is evidence for Lakoff’s hypothesis, which shows that these sayings are more than just metaphors.
Last year, a study by psychologists from the University of Toronto showed that participants who recalled an experience in which they felt socially excluded gave lower estimates of room temperature than participants who recalled a social inclusion experience. Hans Ijzerman and Gün R. Semin of Utrecht University now show that the opposite is also true. In a paper published in Psychological Science, they report that temperature affects the perception of social relations and the language used to describe them. Ijzerman and Semin recruited 33 students to take part in the study. In one experiment, these participants were asked to hold a drink when they arrived at the lab, while the experimenter apparently installed a questionnaire on a computer. After filling out the questionnaire (which was not related to the study), the participants were asked to choose a person they know and to rate themselves and that person on the Inclusion of Other in Self (IOS) scale. This consists of a series of diagrams and is designed to measure the perceived degree of overlap with others; the greater the overlap between the circles, the higher the social proximity, which the researchers defined as the perceived, rather than physical, distance between self and other. The participants had been divided into two groups at the beginning of the experiment. Those in the warm condition had been given a warm drink to hold when they entered the room, while those in the cold condition had been given a cold one.
It was found that the perceived degree of overlap with the known other was significantly greater for those participants handed a warm drink at the start of the experiment than those handed a cold one. Similarly, another recent study found that those who hold a hot cup of coffee judged others to be more generous and caring than those who held a cup of iced coffee.
In a second experiment, IJzerman and Semin investigated whether manipulating room temperature would affect the language used to describe simulated social events. This time, 52 participants were asked to sit in a room which was either cold (15-18 C) or warm (22-24 C), and to watch a short film clip of animated chess pieces, which they then described in their own words. The experimenter recorded their responses, according to the abtractness of the language used (using the Linguistic Category Model).
Afterwards, the participants used the IOS scale to describe their relation to the experimenter. The statistical analyses showed that those in the warm condition used more concrete terms to describe the animation, and felt closer to the experimenter, than those in the cold condition. perceptual focus.JPG Finally, the researchers examined whether temperature would also affect perception of the relationships between objects in a perceptual focus task. 39 more students were recruited, and shown a visual stimulus, such as a triangle made up of three smaller triangles (the target image, right, top).
They were then shown two more objects (right, bottom), and asked to judge which was more similar to the first. For the purpose of this task, the target is more similar to the triangle made up of small squares than it is to the square made up of small triangles, because the relationship between the objects is the same, even though their properties are not.
The participants were again allocated to warm and cold groups to perform the task, and shown the chess piece animation afterwards. In this experiment, participants in the warm condition had a greater relational perspective than those in the cold condition – that is, they tended to judge the triangle made of squares as being more similar to to the target object. And, as in the experiment, they used more concrete language to describe what they had seen in the animated film. In line with earlier work, this study shows that temperature has a direct effect on social relations. It also shows that temperature affects language and the perception of relationships between inanimate objects.
The findings support idea that thought processes are grounded in bodily sensations. Specifically, it provides further evidence that interpersonal relationships – which for most of us are critical in everyday life – are strongly grounded in temperature. Furthermore, the interaction between social cognition and temperature is apparently bi-directional: warmer temperatures induce social proximity, while loneliness makes people feel colder. In terms of brain function, there is evidence that a part of the brain called the insula is involved in processing both psychological and physical warmth.
on 06-01-2013 09:09 PM
Geez simple really
on 06-01-2013 09:11 PM
LOL sea jay - thanks
and only 13 words....
on 06-01-2013 09:16 PM
George Lakoff is Richard and Rhoda Goldman Distinguished Professor of Cognitive Science and Linguistics at the University of California at Berkeley, where he has taught since 1972. He previously taught at Harvard (1965-69) and the University of Michigan (1969-1972).
He graduated from MIT in 1962 (in Mathematics and Literature) and received his PhD in Linguistics from Indiana University in 1966.
on 06-01-2013 09:18 PM
Very interesting research he does.....
He is academically most famous for his 'ideas about the centrality of metaphor to human thinking, political behavior and society.' He says empathy is a foundation of morality and of progressive values.
George is the author of many academic and politically related books. His latest book is The Little Blue Book: The Essential Guide to Thinking and Talking Democratic. 'A compact handbook on partisan political discourse, with a blueprint for how liberals can switch from playing defense against conservatives to launching a stronger offense.'
Basing the discourse on the foundational value of empathy. America was founded on a moral system and that system starts with empathy.
on 06-01-2013 09:19 PM
"I didn't except you to read it"
B-)
:8}:^O
on 06-01-2013 09:22 PM
How many opening posts are in bold text, and are also lengthy with no paragraphs? Not many. I am not the only one here who says they find it to hard to read long scrollers without paragraph breaks.
I didn't say I chose not to read it. I gave the OP the opportunity to unbold it and put in paragraphs to make it easier for ALL viewers to read, not just me.
For meep - thanks,I did read your unbold, paragraphed post.
For crikey - link which was omited from the opening post.
It is on several websites/blogs
http://scienceblogs.com/neurophilosophy/2009/09/19/the-social-thermometer-temperature-affects-how-we-perceive-relationships/
on 06-01-2013 09:24 PM
Cheers A3, you're too kind. 🙂
(now, if you would only change your name to something I could spell.......)
LOL
on 06-01-2013 09:28 PM
I am still not going to read all that.
on 06-01-2013 09:29 PM
I did summarise it. It's about hot flushes and when you get that everyone pisses you off.
Cheers.
on 06-01-2013 09:30 PM
joz - only those are interested will read it.:8}