Source - http://www.upi.com/
By - Press Release
Category - Santa Clarita Local Colleges
Posted By - Hampton Inn Santa Clarita
By - Press Release
Category - Santa Clarita Local Colleges
Posted By - Hampton Inn Santa Clarita
Santa Clarita Local Colleges |
People who think they can get away with cheating can lead to a "cheater's high," U.S. researchers suggest.
Lead author Nicole E. Ruedy of the University of Washington said
although people predicted they would feel bad after cheating or being
dishonest, many didn't.
"When people do something wrong specifically to harm someone else,
such as apply an electrical shock, the consistent reaction in previous
research has been that they feel bad about their behavior," Ruedy said
in a statement. "Our study reveals people actually might experience a
'cheater's high' after doing something unethical that doesn't directly
harm someone else."
Several experiments involving more than 1,000 people in the United
States and England found even when there was no tangible reward, people
who cheated felt better on average than those who didn't cheat.
A little more than half the study participants were men, with 400
from the general public in their late 20s or early 30s and the rest in
their 20s at universities.
Participants predicted that they or someone else who cheated on a
test or logged more hours than they had worked to get a bonus would feel
bad or ambivalent afterward.
However, when participants actually cheated, they said they generally got a significant emotional boost instead.
In addition, the study published in the Journal of Personality and
Social Psychology, also found people who gained from another person's
misdeeds felt better on average than those who didn't.
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