Hebrews 5:12-14 (KJV) "For when for the time ye ought to be teachers, ye have need that one teach you again which be the first principles of the oracles of God; and are become such as have need of milk, and not of strong meat. For every one that useth milk is unskilful in the word of righteousness: for he is a babe. But strong meat belongeth to them that are of full age, even those who by reason of use have their senses exercised to discern both good and evil."
Proverbs 27:17 (KJV) "Iron sharpeneth iron; so a man sharpeneth the countenance of his friend."
"Now I beseech you, brethren, mark them which cause divisions & offenses contrary to the doctrine which ye have learned; & avoid them." Romans 16:17-18
What starts as smoke around the campfire can sometimes turn into talk around the water cooler. It’s no secret that most people like to gossip, sometimes with damaging social consequences for the person(s) in question.
According to a new study, not only are people highly influenced by gossip, they do so even when the information is explicitly identified as questionable or untrustworthy.
I heard it on the grapevine ...
During two experiments involving 56 participants, psychologists at Humboldt University in Berlin tested how people responded to positive or negative information about strangers. Each participant was presented with photographs of unfamiliar faces and received negative information about that person, which was either presented as a fact (e.g. “He bullied his apprentice”) or as questionable gossip (e.g. “He allegedly bullied his apprentice”).
As the participants made their value judgments about the gossiped individuals, an electroencephalogram (EEG) recorded their brain activity. The researchers focused on two markers called the Late Positive Potential and the Early Posterior Negativity, which are associated with emotional processing.
The results suggest that people tend to respond emotionally when judging other people, even when this judgment is based on unreliable evidence. The second experiment replicated these findings and extended them to positive information. The participants were not instructed in any way to suppress the emotional content of the information they had been exposed to or to consciously consider the effects that rumors might have. Instead, they were all free to make value judgments, as is often the case in day-to-day life.
“Our findings demonstrate a tendency for strong emotional evaluations and person judgments even when they are knowingly based on unclear evidence,” the authors concluded in the study published in the journal Emotion.
Qualifiers and phrases such as ‘allegedly’, ‘apparently’ or ‘suspected of’ are widely used by the media during coverage of other people to signal uncertainty of information about these persons. The new findings, however, show that marking information as untrustworthy does little to prevent prejudice or defamation. This explains why even ‘soft’ fake news can be just as bad as blatant lies.
The study’s limitations include a small sample size and the fact that the gossiped individuals were all strangers. Would the conclusion change if the rumors were about an acquaintance? That would be an interesting investigation for another time. Yes, you might argue that how people respond to gossip is rather common sense, as reproachable as prejudice may be. But that’s the point of science, after all — separating fact from opinion.
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