Today's NY Times Science section reports on (reg. req'd, no RSS of this article) a fascinating study based on Solomon Asch's classic 50s research on social conformity. Asch found that people change opinions based upon those of others. This isn't such big news. People pressure one another into watching "Desperate Housewives" or listening to Billy Joe Shavers all the time. But the "opinions" in Asch's study were perceptual in nature: "is this line the same length as that line?" Three out of four subjects changed their opinion about that question to coincide with those of experimenter cohorts giving the wrong answer.
Today's report of an extension of the study goes further. MRI studies of subjects performing the same task showed that those who "changed their mind" actually did a something else, they "changed their world." In those cases in which subjects switched opinions, the MRIs showed the "processing" work was taking place in that part of the brain that manages perceptual images. When the subjects did not change their opinions, a portion of the brain associated with emotion was most active. The researchers' conclusions?
The implications of the study's findings are huge, Dr. Berns said.
In many areas of society - elections, for example, or jury trials - the accepted way to resolve conflicts between an individual and a group is to invoke the "rule of the majority." There is a sound reason for this: A majority represents the collective wisdom of many people, rather than the judgment of a single person.
But the superiority of the group can disappear when the group exerts pressure on individuals, Dr. Berns said.
The unpleasantness of standing alone can make a majority opinion seem more appealing than sticking to one's own beliefs.
The findings echo Jim Surowiecki's in The Wisdom of Crowds. Crowds come to highly accurate conclusions when the individuals make judgments independent of one another. When they influence one another's thinking too closely, he said, "groupthink" becomes a significant danger.
The research then comes to an interesting conclusion:
If other people's views can actually affect how someone perceives the external world, then truth itself is called into question.
There is no way out of this problem, Dr. Ariely said.
"Truth as subjective social reality" rather than "truth as objective conformity with the outside world." This is a long-standing problem in philosophy and psychology. As usual, when we try to take lived human experience out of the equation and adopt models that equate people with machines, we run into trouble.
But we're so much more comfortable when we've removed from the equation "subjectivity," with all its messy roots, influences and consequences.
More to follow.



In terms of news journalism there seems to be a strong urge these days to claim objectivity. Why? You seem to have it on it; subjectivity introduces the "messy". If we acknowledged that total neutrality on some issue is not possible, would we have the basis for honest public debate again? Would we revive civil discourse? The possibility of self-deception could be recognized and we might even be able to examine our assumptions. Or not.
Thanks for the post! Keep creating, Mike
Posted by: Michael | June 28, 2005 at 05:05 PM
Ugh. I'm stuck in the mud on this one. All I can think of is how this relates to Nazi Germany in the 1930's - 1945. Very frightening.
violette
Posted by: violette | June 28, 2005 at 10:26 PM
Mike, you're tapping into the new "media value creation" world. Point of view, not the elimination of point of view. Thanks for contributing.
Of course you've hit on the apotheosis of our fears on this issue, violette. When our nature is twisted to reveal its darkest angles, awful things can happen. Be that as it may (and I don't mean to be trite or at all dismissive) we cannot escape the collective character of our reality, our truth, and now we see, our very vision.
Posted by: Tom | June 28, 2005 at 10:37 PM
You're right Tom.
So what is the truth and where do we get it?
Could the reality be that we're led by ease, comfort zones and acceptance via conformity? These factors determine our willingness to take what we hear and go with it whether or not we believe it, because it's what we're fed.
violette
violette
Posted by: violette | June 28, 2005 at 11:01 PM
The "crowded brain" is consistent with the alternate reality of corporate behavior, which sacrifices the individual to the group...a false group reality that people seem to know is false and they go along with it anyway. Not unlike connecting 9/11 and Iraq.
Posted by: Connie Sartain | June 30, 2005 at 10:20 AM