A glove on your hand can change your mind

March 10, 2011
A glove on your hand can change your mind

Enlarge

A glove on your hand can change your mind. Participants wore a bulky ski glove on one hand, with the other glove dangling from the same wrist, while arranging dominoes on a table. Right-handers who wore the glove on their right hand became functionally left-handed, causing them to make good-bad judgments like natural left-handers. © Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics

(PhysOrg.com) -- Unconsciously, right-handers associate good with the right side of space and bad with the left. But this association can be rapidly changed, according to a study published online March 9, 2011 in Psychological Science, by Daniel Casasanto (Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics) and Evangelia Chrysikou (University of Pennsylvania). Even a few minutes of using the left hand more fluently than the right can reverse right-handers' judgments of good and bad, making them think that the left is the 'right side' of space. Conceptions of good and bad are rooted in people's bodily experiences, and change when patterns of bodily experience change.

In language, positive ideas are linked with the right side of space and negative ideas with the left. It's good to be 'in the right', but bad to be 'out in left field'. Space and goodness are also associated in the unconscious mind, but not always in the same way that they are linked in language. For right-handers, right is good, but for left-handers, left is good.

In experiments by psychologist Daniel Casasanto, when people were asked which of two products to buy, which of two job applicants to hire, or which of two alien creatures looks more intelligent, right-handers tended to choose the product, person, or creature they saw on their right, but most left-handers chose the one on their left.

Why do righties and lefties think differently? Casasanto proposed that people's conceptions of good and bad depend, in part, on the way they use their hands. 'People can act more fluently with their dominant hand, and come to unconsciously associate good things with their fluent side of space.'

To test this theory, Casasanto and colleagues studied how natural right-handers think about good and bad when their right hand is handicapped, either due to or something much less extreme: wearing a ski glove. completed a task that reveals implicit associations between space and goodness in healthy participants. Patients who had lost the use of their left hand showed the usual right-is-good pattern. But patients who lost the use of their right hand following damage to the left-hemisphere of the brain associated good with left, like natural left-handers.

The same pattern was found in healthy university students who performed a motor fluency task while wearing a bulky glove on either their left hand (which preserved their right-handedness) or on their right hand, which turned them temporarily into left-handers. After about 12 minutes of lopsided motor experience, the right-gloved participants' judgments on an unrelated task showed a good-is-left bias, like natural left-handers.

'People generally think their judgments are rational, and their concepts are stable,' says Casasanto. 'But if wearing a glove for a few minutes can reverse people's usual judgments about what's good and bad, perhaps the mind is more malleable than we thought.'

More information: Casasanto, D., & Chrysikou, E. (2011). When Left is 'Right': Motor fluency shapes abstract concepts. Psychological Science. doi:10.1177/0956797611401755

Provided by Max-Planck-Gesellschaft (news : web)

4.3 /5 (11 votes)  

Filter


Move the slider to adjust rank threshold, so that you can hide some of the comments.


Display comments: newest first

TheGhostofOtto1923
Mar 10, 2011

Rank: 4.2 / 5 (5)
So much for the concept of free will, eh? More philo poetry bites the dust.
brad_levy
Mar 10, 2011

Rank: 5 / 5 (2)
This doesn't surprise me. If two items we are asked to choose between are otherwise equal in all respects, it would seem natural that the brain would choose the one that it is easiest to connect with under current circumstances. The underlying decision rule wouldn't be changing, just being applied. I don't think it reflects malleability of the brain as much as whether the brain is making the decision based on repetitive habit/dominance or current input. Perhaps in this case the brain is being more rational than sometimes being given credit for. It'd be an interesting area for further study.
StillWind
Mar 10, 2011

Rank: 2.3 / 5 (3)
I think that there is alot more here than meets the eye. I'd love to see how this was performed, and where the people came from that took part in the "test". Different cultures have different ideas about these things, which can have a major effect on the results.
Really looks like more junk science to me.
James_Absconditus
Mar 10, 2011

Rank: 3 / 5 (1)
'But if wearing a glove for a few minutes can reverse people's usual judgments about what's good and bad, perhaps the mind is more malleable than we thought.'

Does the glove make people agree that murder is good? How about rape or theft?
ironjustice
Mar 11, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
This gives credence to the 'home remedy' of tying the left hand to the body in order to right handededness in your child.
cyberCMDR
Mar 11, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
The Romans knew this. They called the left side "sinister", which has come into English with its darker interpretation. The right side, which most people used to manipulate things, was called "dexter", from which we get "dexterous".
ekim
Mar 11, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
Does the glove make people agree that murder is good? How about rape or theft?

This has OJ all over it.
frazzical
Mar 14, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
I'm ambidextrous. This must be why I'm so indecisive.
Rank 4.3 /5 (11 votes)
Related Stories
Relevant PhysicsForums posts
  • stomach not emptying
    createdFeb 16, 2012
  • White reflections in photos in one eye
    createdFeb 15, 2012
  • Is Everyday Technology Killing Us?
    createdFeb 08, 2012
  • Exercise and weight loss
    createdFeb 08, 2012
  • Why do we have head aches? Our brains can't feel anything.
    createdFeb 07, 2012
  • "The end of diseases" by David Agus, interview from Daily Show with Jon Stewart
    createdFeb 04, 2012
  • More from Physics Forums - Medical Sciences

More news stories

CT colonography shown to be comparable to standard colonoscopy

Computerized tomographic (CT) colonography (CTC), also known as virtual colonoscopy, is comparable to standard colonoscopy in its ability to accurately detect cancer and precancerous polyps in people ages 65 and older, according ...

Medicine & Health / Cancer

created 3 hours ago | popularity not rated yet | comments 0

What can animals' survival instincts tell us about understanding human emotion?

Can animals' survival instincts shed additional light on what we know about human emotion? New York University neuroscientist Joseph LeDoux poses this question in outlining a pioneering theory, drawn from two decades of research, ...

Medicine & Health / Neuroscience

created 14 hours ago | popularity 5 / 5 (3) | comments 4 | with audio podcast

Study: Virtual colonoscopy effective screening tool for adults over 65

Computed tomography (CT) colonography can be used as a primary screening tool for colorectal cancer in adults over the age of 65, according to a new study published online in the journal Radiology.

Medicine & Health / Other

created 3 hours ago | popularity not rated yet | comments 0

Injectable gel could repair tissue damaged by heart attack

(Medical Xpress) -- University of California, San Diego researchers have developed a new injectable hydrogel that could be an effective and safe treatment for tissue damage caused by heart attacks.

Medicine & Health / Cardiology

created 17 hours ago | popularity 4.7 / 5 (6) | comments 3 | with audio podcast

Mini molecules could help fight battle of aortic bulge

When aortic walls buckle, the body's main blood pipe forms an ever-growing bulge. To thwart a deadly rupture, a team of Stanford University School of Medicine researchers has found two tiny molecules that may be able to orchestrate ...

Medicine & Health / Cardiology

created 13 hours ago | popularity 5 / 5 (1) | comments 0 | with audio podcast


Researchers build first physical 'metatronic' circuit

(PhysOrg.com) -- The technological world of the 21st century owes a tremendous amount to advances in electrical engineering, specifically, the ability to finely control the flow of electrical charges using ...

Spitzer finds solid buckyballs in space

(PhysOrg.com) -- Astronomers using data from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope have, for the first time, discovered buckyballs in a solid form in space. Prior to this discovery, the microscopic carbon spheres ...

Faster than light neutrinos? More like faulty wiring

You can shelf your designs for a warp drive engine (for now) and put the DeLorean back in the garage; it turns out neutrinos may not have broken any cosmic speed limits after all.

Physicists surprised by disappearing and reappearing superconductivity in iron selenium chalcogenides

Superconductivity is a rare physical state in which matter is able to conduct electricity -- maintain a flow of electrons -- without any resistance. This phenomenon can only be found in certain materials at low temperatures, ...

Stanford research team cracks animated NuCaptcha

(PhysOrg.com) -- The research team from Stanford University, led by Elie Bursztein, that previously had cracked regular CAPTCHAs and then audio CAPTCHAs, now has also successfully cracked the animated version called NuCapt ...

Going up: Japan builder eyes space elevator

A Japanese construction firm claimed Wednesday it could execute an out-of-this-world plan to put tourists in space within 40 years by building an elevator that stretches a quarter of the way to the moon.