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STANFORD GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS, September 2005
After the Sept. 11,
2001, terrorist attacks many Americans reported dramatic changes
in their behavior, from increased church attendance and charitable
giving to - at the other end of the scale - overeating and overspending.
Intrigued by these anecdotal reports, Baba Shiv, associate professor
of marketing at Stanford Graduate School of Business, and colleagues
Rosellina Ferraro and James R. Bettman from Duke University's Fuqua
School of Business set out to discover what might be driving these
changed behaviors.
They discovered that when confronted with thoughts of death, people
tend to act in ways that will boost their self-esteem. They also
have fewer cognitive resources to resist behaviors that are not
central to their self-image. People for whom being slim or fit
is important to their self-image, for instance, will not be as
likely to overeat, but if physical appearance isn't as important,
the willpower to resist that fudge sundae will plummet.
As a basis for the study, the researchers built upon an existing
body of work on "Terror Management Theory," which attempts to explain
how people cope when faced with a threat to their mortality. The
theory holds that when reminded of their own mortality people first
tend to cope in two ways: forcefully defending their cultural worldview
(which could manifest itself in forms such as acting more aggressively
toward someone with different political beliefs); or behaving in
ways most likely to bolster their self-esteem.
The researchers decided to test the second part of this theory
by examining two possible sources of self-esteem: physical appearance
and being virtuous.
Researchers told 115 student subjects that they would be entered
into a $200 lottery as part of their compensation for participating
in a study. All participants first answered a questionnaire that
measured the importance of virtue to their self-esteem. Half were
then asked questions about the prospects of their own deaths while
the other half were asked about dental pain. At the end, subjects
in each group were asked how much of the $200 they would be willing
to donate to charity if they won the lottery.
Participants for whom virtue was an important source of self-esteem
offered significantly higher donations (an average of $65) when
reminded of their mortality than when they were not (an average
of just $34.50). Participants for whom virtue was not an important
source of self-esteem actually donated less when reminded of their
own deaths (an average of $20.36 compared with $28.60).
A second part of the study investigated body image as a source
of self-esteem. Participants were first asked questions to determine
how their attitude toward their bodies contributed to their sense
of self. Half were then asked about their reactions to September
11 while the others were asked about a recent local fire in which
a building was destroyed but no one was hurt.
Afterward, all participants were given the choice between two
snacks-chocolate cake or fruit salad-ostensibly as part of their
reward for participating in the study.
Among women whose bodies contributed greatly to their self-esteem,
only 23 percent chose cake when their sense of mortality was high;
a dramatic drop from the 38 percent that chose cake when their
sense of mortality was low.
These numbers make perfect sense, according to Shiv. "When people
are reminded of their deaths, they are desperately seeking to cope,
and if a decision can help them boost their self-esteem, they will
make that decision. Thus women whose bodies were important to their
self-esteem were much more likely to reject the offer of chocolate
cake when their sense of mortality was heightened."
However, among women whose bodies did not contribute significantly
to their sense of self-esteem, 94 percent chose chocolate cake
when reminded of 9/11-more than twice as many as those who chose
cake when their sense of mortality was low (44 percent).
"If you are using all your resources to focus on some important
aspect of self-esteem in order to cope with thoughts of death,
and body esteem is not central to you, then you simply have fewer
resources to help you resist that tempting piece of chocolate cake," said
Shiv.
Interestingly, there was no difference between the men's choice
of cake or fruit salad based on their sense of mortality. The researchers
attributed this to the fact that physical appearance is more of
a "hot button" for women than for men.
Shiv pointed out that this study might provide clues to precisely
why life-changing behaviors often take place after a death has
occurred. "A friend passes away and you say: 'I will spend more
time with my kids; I'll get into shape; I'll give more to charity.'
This gives us a handle on why that happens."
Related Information
"Let Us Eat and Drink, for Tomorrow We Shall Die: Effects of Mortality
Salience and Self-Esteem on Self-Regulation in Consumer Choice," Rosellina
Ferraro, Baba Shiv, and James R. Bettman, Journal of Consumer
Research , June 2005.
"Suppression, Accessibility of Death-Related Thoughts, and Cultural
Worldview Defense: Exploring the Psychodynamics of Terror Management," Jamie
Arndt, Jeff Greenberg, Sheldon Solomon, Tom Pyszczynski, and Linda
Simon, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology ,
July 1997.
"The Impact of Mortality Salience on Reckless Driving: A Test
of Terror Management Mechanisms," Orit Taubman Ben-Ari, Victor
Florian, and Mario Mikulincer, Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology , January 1999.
"The Costly Pursuit of Self-Esteem," Jennifer
Crocker and Lora E. Park, Psychological Bulletin, May 2004.
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