首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
In a windowless room on the University of California, Berkeley, campus, two undergrads are playing a Monopoly game that one of t
In a windowless room on the University of California, Berkeley, campus, two undergrads are playing a Monopoly game that one of t
admin
2015-06-14
69
问题
In a windowless room on the University of California, Berkeley, campus, two undergrads are playing a Monopoly game that one of them has no chance of winning. A team of psychologists has rigged it so that skill, brains, savvy, and luck—those ingredients that ineffably combine to create success in games as in life—have been made immaterial. Here, the only thing that matters is money.
One of the players, a brown-haired guy in a striped T-shirt, has been made "rich." He got $2,000 from the Monopoly bank at the start of the game and receives $200 each time he passes Go. The second player, a chubby young man in glasses, is comparatively impoverished. He was given $1,000 at the start and collects $100 for passing Go. T-Shirt can roll two dice, but Glasses can only roll one, limiting how fast he can advance. The students play for fifteen minutes under the watchful eye of two video cameras, while down the hall in another windowless room, the researchers huddle around a computer screen, later recording in a giant spreadsheet the subjects’ every facial twitch and hand gesture.
T-Shirt isn’t just winning: he’s crushing Glasses. Initially, he reacted to the inequality between him and his opponent with a series of smirks, an acknowledgment, perhaps, of the inherent awkwardness of the situation. "Hey," his expression seemed to say, "this is weird and unfair, but whatever." Soon, though, as he whizzes around the board, purchasing properties and collecting rent, whatever discomfort he feels seems to dissipate. Hes a skinny kid, but he balloons in size, spreading his limbs toward the jar ends of the table. He smacks his playing piece(in the experiment, the wealthy player gets the Rolls-Royce)as he makes the circuit—smack, smack, smack ending his turns with a board-shuddering bang! Four minutes in, he picks up Glasses’s piece, the little elf shoe, and moves it for him. As the game nears its finish, T-Shirt moves his Rolls faster. The taunting is over now: He’s all efficiency. He refuses to meet Glasses’s gaze. His expression is stone cold as he takes the loser’s cash.
For a long time, primatologists have known that chimpanzees will act out social dominance with a special ferociousness, slapping hands, stamping feet, or "charging back and forth and dragging huge branches," as Jane Goodall once wrote. And sociologists and anthropologists have explored the effects of hierarchy in tribes and groups. But psychology has only recently begun seriously investigating how having money, that major marker of status in the modern world, affects psychosocial behavior in the species Homo sapiens. By making real people temporarily very affluent, without regard to their actual economic circumstances and within the controlled environment of a psych lab, the Berkeley researchers aim to demonstrate the potency of that one variable. "Putting someone in a role where they’re more privileged and have more power in a game makes them behave like people who actually do have more power, more money, and more status," says Paul Piff, the psychologist who designed the experiment. The Monopoly results, based on a year of watching inequitable games between pairs like Glasses and T-Shirt, have not yet been released. But Piff believes that they will support and amplify his previous provocative research.
Earlier this year, Piff, who is 30, published a paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that made him semi-famous. Titled "Higher Social Class Predicts Increased Unethical Behavior," it showed through quizzes, online games, questionnaires, in-lab manipulations, and field studies that living high on the socioeconomic ladder can, colloquially speaking, dehumanize people. It can make them less ethical, more selfish, more insular, and less compassionate than other people. It can make them more likely, as Piff demonstrated in one of his experiments, to take candy from a bowl of sweets designated for children. "While having money doesn’t necessarily make anybody anything," Piff says, "the rich are way more likely to prioritize their own self-interests above the interests of other people. It makes them more likely to exhibit characteristics that we would stereotypically associate with, say, assholes. "
These findings, in combination with a researcher eager to promote them, reverberated online. On message boards, detractors accused Piff of using his lab to promote a leftist agenda: that his home base was Berkeley only fueled those suspicions. Piff s e-mail box filled with messages calling him a "liberal idiot" and his work "junk science." "I would wager," says Wharton business-school psychologist Philip Tetlock, "that a congressional committee chair who favors redistribution of wealth would be far more likely to call these experts in as witnesses than would a committee chair who opposes redistribution."
It is easy to see Piff’s research as ideologically motivated. The point is to "shed light on some of the consequences of social class," he says. But whatever his goal is, the "results are apolitical," he says, and the data point in a clear direction. "Would I be less excited if we found that higher-status people were more generous?" he asks. "I’d probably be less excited, but that’s not what we found."
According to the article, a Monopoly game
选项
A、is designed by psychologists who are the only people to win the game.
B、is played by undergraduates with skills, brains, savvy and luck.
C、makes the winner rich and loser impoverished in their lives.
D、determines who will win the game at the very beginning.
答案
D
解析
细节题。由题干Monopoly game定位至第一段首句,其中提到“two undergrads are playing aMonopoly game that one of them has no chance of winning”,这句话是说两人中的一人永远没有获胜的机会,也就间接地告诉读者在游戏一开始就决定了谁胜谁负。在第三段第二句中,又提到“Initially,he reactedto the inequality between him and his opponent…”,从initially和inequality两词可以判断,游戏一开始就是不公平的,因为胜负已经事先决定了,故选[D]。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.kaotiyun.com/show/wyOO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
AccordingtoLouisSeck,theIsraeliproject______.
Cultureshockisapainfulexperiencewegothroughwhenweencountermanynewthingsinanothercountryandwe【1】______insom
Cultureshockisapainfulexperiencewegothroughwhenweencountermanynewthingsinanothercountryandwe【1】______insom
Cultureshockisapainfulexperiencewegothroughwhenweencountermanynewthingsinanothercountryandwe【1】______insom
RobertLouisStevensonisarepresentativeof_____inEnglishliterature.
Aco-educationalschoolofferschildrennothinglessthanatrueversionofsocietyinminiature.Boysandgirlsaregiventhe
Thenatureoflanguageisthenatureofhumanthoughtandhumanaction,forlanguageisnomorenorlessthanthetoolofboth
Whatkindoftoneisusedwhenwhatissaidincludesconnotativemeaning?
______referstothereformmovementsintheUnitedStatesaimedatabolishingracialdiscriminationagainstAmericanAfricans.
Evenahalf-heartedonlookercannothelpbutrealizethatinthisfast-pacedworld,mostaspectsofpopularcultureareconstan
随机试题
ThenumberofspeakersofEnglishinShakespeare’stimeisestimatedtohavebeenaboutfivemillion.Todayitisestimatedthat
A、增强作用B、协同作用C、相加作用D、拮抗作用E、增敏作用一药可使组织或受体对另一药的敏感性增强
测量胎儿腹围的标准平面是
A.疏肝清热,养血调经B.疏肝健脾,养血调经C.疏肝化痰,和胃止痛D.健脾,化湿,和胃E.消食,导滞,和胃某女,33岁,半年来,郁闷不舒,胸胁胀痛,头晕目眩,食欲减退,月经不调。医师处以逍遥颗粒,是因其能()
有争议的界址除了进行文字记载外同时应在宗地现状图上进行描绘和记载,以便提请国土资源管理部门进行土地权属争议的()。
过程分析仪表测量的内容是( )。
某企业2013年4月1日开始自行建造一栋厂房,10月31日,工程达到预定可使用状态交付使用。2013年发生的下列将集中能增加厂房入账价值的有()。
游客抵达饭店后,地方导游员应主动办理住房登记手续,并请领队或全程导游员向旅游者分发住房卡。()
一般资料:女,23岁,未婚,中专文化,现为某单位文员。求助者的主要问题:心情不好,郁闷、无聊,失眠一一个多月。求助者自述:我在学校的时候就与男友相恋,到现在已经将近三年,两个人的感情很好,所以毕业以后就谈及结婚。不久前将男友带回家后,父
“书”字的简化方法是()。
最新回复
(
0
)