Nagging spouse? You may
have an excuse for not responding
DURHAM,
N.C. –- New research findings now appearing online in the Journal of
Experimental Social Psychology began with a professor's desire to understand
why her husband often seemed to ignore her requests for help around the
house.
"My
husband, while very charming in many ways, has an annoying tendency of doing
exactly the opposite of what I would like him to do in many situations,"
said Tanya L. Chartrand, an associate professor of marketing and psychology
at Duke University's Fuqua School of Business.
When Chartrand envisioned a formal academic study of people's resistance to
the wishes of their partners, parents or bosses, her husband, Gavan
Fitzsimons, became not only her inspiration, but also her collaborator.
Fitzsimons is a professor of marketing and psychology at Duke who, like
Chartrand, is an expert in the field of consumer psychology.
Working
with Duke Ph.D. student Amy Dalton, Chartrand and Fitzsimons have
demonstrated that some people will act in ways that are not to their own
benefit simply because they wish to avoid doing what other people want them
to.
Psychologists call this reactance: a person's tendency to resist social
influences that they perceive as threats to their autonomy.
The
team found that people do not necessarily oppose others' wishes
intentionally. Instead, even the slightest nonconscious exposure to the name
of a significant person in their life is enough to bring about reactance and
cause them to rebel against that person's wishes.
"Psychologists have known for some time that reactance can cause a person to
work in opposition to another person's desires," Chartrand said. "We wanted
to know whether reactance could occur even when exposure to a significant
other, and their associated wishes for us, takes place at a nonconscious
level."
The
researchers undertook a set of experiments to determine whether reactance
might occur unintentionally, completely outside of the reactant individual's
conscious awareness.
In the
first experiment, participants were asked to name a significant person in
their lives whom they perceived to be controlling and who wanted them to
work hard, and another significant and controlling person who wanted them to
have fun. Participants then performed a computer-based activity during which
the name of one or the other of these people was repeatedly, but
subliminally, flashed on the screen. The name appeared too quickly for the
participants to consciously realize they had seen it, but just long enough
for the significant other to be activated in their nonconscious minds. The
participants were then given a series of anagrams to solve, creating words
from jumbled letters.
People
who were exposed to the name of a person who wanted them to work hard
performed significantly worse on the anagram task than did participants who
were exposed to the name of a person who wanted them to have fun.
"Our
participants were not even aware that they had been exposed to someone
else's name, yet that nonconscious exposure was enough to cause them to act
in defiance of what their significant other would want them to do,"
Fitzsimons said.
A
second experiment used a similar approach and added an assessment of each
participant's level of reactance. People who were more reactant responded
more strongly to the subliminal cues and showed greater variation in their
performance than people who were less reactant.
"The
main finding of this research is that people with a tendency toward
reactance may nonconsciously and quite unintentionally act in a
counterproductive manner simply because they are trying to resist someone
else's encroachment on their freedom," Chartrand said.
The
researchers suggest that people who tend to experience reactance when their
freedoms are threatened should try to be aware of situations and people who
draw out their reactant tendencies. That way, they can be more mindful of
their behaviors and avoid situations where they might adopt detrimental
behaviors out of a sense of rebellion.
Not
surprisingly perhaps, Chartrand and Fitzsimons, as wife and husband, also
take home some slightly differing messages from their experiments.
Chartrand believes her husband "should now be better equipped to suppress
his reactant tendencies." Fitzsimons, however, believes the results "suggest
that reactance to significant others is so automatic that I can't possibly
be expected to control it if I don't even know it's happening.