Subjects who thought their putter had been owned by a pro golfer putted better than others using the same putter without being told its pedigree. Amy Kraft reports It takes lots of practice to shave strokes off your golf score. Or you can just really believe in your putter. Because a new study finds that people putted better when told that their putter had been used by a pro golfer.
The finding illustrates what’s called positive contagion: the belief that beneficial properties can be transferred to an object. The research is in the journal Public Library of Science ONE.
難道說好運還能傳染?確實有研究表明物體能從人身上吸引一些好的特質(zhì)傳給其他人。這項研究發(fā)表在《公共科學圖書館·綜合》雜志上。
該研究把41名有打高爾夫球經(jīng)驗的大學生分為兩組,第一組被告知他們將要用的推桿是一流高爾夫球手柯蒂斯用過的,第二組用的推桿其實和第一組的一樣,只是他們以為自己用的是普通的推桿揮桿之前,兩組選手都被要求畫一個和球洞一樣的圓圈,以為自己握了高手球桿的選手畫的圈圈更大。隨后每組選手都推了10桿球,那些認為沾到柯蒂斯“仙氣”的選手平均推多1.5個球入穴。所以說積極的自欺欺人或許能帶來好成績。