Tuesday, 6 May 2008

We are hard-wired to care about social status

Another interesting article from the BBC website. I love to read your comments about these things I put up. I find your comments as fascinating as the original information:

"Scientists have found that we are hard-wired to care about social status. There is a particular zone in the brain which "lights up" when we are asked to think about a person's class, or when we are confronted with someone higher in the pecking order.

The teams who studied the zone believe it will shed light on why social standing has such an impact on behaviour and health - and why it is just as important to us as money.

The relationship between social rank and health has already been noted. A study of civil servants found that as their position in the office rose their chances of developing heart disease and dying early fell.

The latest results come from two studies reported in the journal Neuron. Scientists used functional magnetic resonance imaging to scan the activity in subjects' brains. The first team, at the National Institute of Mental Health in Bethesda, Maryland, created artificial social pecking orders. Each of 72 volunteers was told they were playing a game with two other participants, one of whom was more skilled and the other less.

Just viewing a player ranked as "superior" activated a region at the front of the brain that appeared to specialise in sizing others up and assessing social status.

In the second study, Japanese researchers scanned brains of volunteers either winning money at a card game, or when they believed their personality was being assessed by strangers.

The scientists found the same part of the brain lit up when people won money at cards as when they were ranked as having a good reputation."

2 comments:

mule in hoss harness said...

Well, duh---if not for this particular hard-wiring, poor Jane Austen would have been out of a writin' job (as would Nancy Mitford, Edith Wharton, Evelyn Waugh, Anthony Trollope, Marcel Proust, et al ad infinitum...) If humans had absolutely no perception/interest in social standing, why, we'd be left with a few horrible Theodore Dreiser works!

Animals do it too---look at all the studies on gorillas in the wild, horse herds, wolves...

Pretty complex topic for early morning---I think I'll return to the Oreo Cookie topic (more along my intellectual lines:):)

mel said...

I don't care about status at all. Just give me the money!