by Bill Hathaway
Credit: Shutterstock
(Medical Xpress)—As baseball playoffs begin this week, Yale psychologists have a prediction: Your favorite player is likely to be a natural talent rather than someone who worked hard for success. And it definitely won't be somebody who took performance-enhancing drugs.
Studies of adults and children as young as five-years old reveal a strong preference for individuals for whom intelligence, good looks or physical talents come naturally over those who succeed because of hard work, medication, or who were offered bribes.
"People have a bias for the natural," said Kristi Lockhart, associate research scientist in psychology and senior author of a study showing this effect published in a recent issue of the journal Developmental Psychology.
A look at the riveting competition in 1961 between two New York Yankee teammates striving to beat Babe Ruth's home run record illustrates the principle.
"People loved Mickey Mantle, who was loaded with natural talent, but not so much Roger Maris, who worked hard for his achievement," Lockhart said. "But they would like Maris a lot more than someone who used performance-enhancing drugs."
Lockhart said this principle also holds for personality traits. People preferred those with a naturally sunny disposition over those who achieved happiness through use of medication or who worked hard to be happy because their parents paid them to do so.
The findings help explain why some people tend to downplay the amount of effort they exert to achieve success. They want others to believe their positive traits developed naturally.
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© Medical Xpress 2011-2013, Phys.org network
by Bill Hathaway
Credit: Shutterstock
(Medical Xpress)—As baseball playoffs begin this week, Yale psychologists have a prediction: Your favorite player is likely to be a natural talent rather than someone who worked hard for success. And it definitely won't be somebody who took performance-enhancing drugs.
Studies of adults and children as young as five-years old reveal a strong preference for individuals for whom intelligence, good looks or physical talents come naturally over those who succeed because of hard work, medication, or who were offered bribes.
"People have a bias for the natural," said Kristi Lockhart, associate research scientist in psychology and senior author of a study showing this effect published in a recent issue of the journal Developmental Psychology.
A look at the riveting competition in 1961 between two New York Yankee teammates striving to beat Babe Ruth's home run record illustrates the principle.
"People loved Mickey Mantle, who was loaded with natural talent, but not so much Roger Maris, who worked hard for his achievement," Lockhart said. "But they would like Maris a lot more than someone who used performance-enhancing drugs."
Lockhart said this principle also holds for personality traits. People preferred those with a naturally sunny disposition over those who achieved happiness through use of medication or who worked hard to be happy because their parents paid them to do so.
The findings help explain why some people tend to downplay the amount of effort they exert to achieve success. They want others to believe their positive traits developed naturally.
Explore further: Parents' praise predicts attitudes toward challenge 5 years later
Medical Xpress on facebook
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Parents' praise predicts attitudes toward challenge 5 years later
Feb 12, 2013
Toddlers whose parents praised their efforts more than they praised them as individuals had a more positive approach to challenges five years later. That's the finding of a new longitudinal study that also found gender differences ...
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Apr 24, 2012
Does hearing that you are a member of an elite group – of chess players, say, or scholars – enhance your performance on tasks related to your alleged area of expertise? Not necessarily, say researchers ...
Practice makes perfect? Not so much
May 20, 2013
Turns out, that old "practice makes perfect" adage may be overblown. New research led by Michigan State University's Zach Hambrick finds that a copious amount of practice is not enough to explain why people ...
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