Friday, July 23, 2010

The unsung pioneers in the study of prejudice

When did the scholarly study of prejudice begin? Most people cite Gordon Allport's seminal work 'The Nature of Prejudice' published in 1954, but according to Russell Webster and colleagues the first scholar to propose a working definition of prejudice was actually the English humanist and literary critic William Hazlitt (pictured), writing way back in 1830.

Inspired in part by his visit to France where he discovered the French were not as 'butterfly, airy, thoughtless, fluttering' as conventional stereotypes of the time predicted, Hazlitt proposed that 'prejudice ... is prejudging any question without having sufficiently examined it, and adhering to our opinion upon it through ignorance, malice, or perversity, in spite of every evidence to the contrary' - a definition that accurately anticipated Allport's own definition and research more than a century later. Ironically, Hazlitt revealed his own sexist prejudices in his writing, claiming that women are 'naturally physiognomists, and men phrenologists', by which he meant that women judge by sensations, men by rules.

The first psychologist to define prejudice and urge psychologists to study it, according to Webster and co, was Josiah Morse (born Moses), a student of G Stanley Hall's at Clark University. Morse, a Jew, changed his name after struggling to gain postgraduate employment (as an aside, Harry Harlow, born Israel, is another Jewish psychologist who changed his name to boost his employment prospects). Morse encountered these difficulties despite Hall writing a letter of recommendation, shocking by today's standards, in which he stated that Morse 'has none of the objectional Jewish traits ... and has no Jewish features'. No doubt inspired by his first-hand experience of prejudice, Morse in 1907 wrote a paper in which he drew attention to the ubiquity of prejudice and, with echoes of Hazlitt, defined it as 'when one fails to adjust or correct one's prejudgement in favour of contrary evidence.'

Another early psychologist to write on prejudice was G.T.W. Patrick, also a student of G. Stanley Hall. In 1890 Patrick published a paper in which he defined prejudice as 'individual deviation from the normal beliefs of mankind, taking as standard the universal, the general, or the mean'. Unlike Hazlitt and Morse, he failed to recognise that a key aspect of prejudice is the inability or reluctance to modify judgements in the face of fresh evidence. But like Hazlitt, Patrick betrayed his own sexist prejudices, writing that the 'woman's mind is less adapted than the man's', although to be fair he did concede that this is only 'an indication' and 'not proved'.

What's remarkable about the writings of Hazlitt, Patrick and Morse is their prescience. For example, they recognised the influence of both explicit and non-conscious, implicit beliefs, and they realised that prejudice has some adaptive value in helping strengthen in-group bonds. Writing in 1904, William Thomas, a sociologist and the last scholar mentioned by Webster and colleagues, even anticipated Allport's Contact Hypothesis - the idea that inter-group prejudice can be reduced by members of distinct groups socialising with each other.

'...These early pioneers deserve explicit credit for recognising prejudice as a phenomenon and one in dire need of psychological study,' Webster and colleagues conclude. 'Contemporary psychologists and sociologists who study stereotyping, prejudice, and discrimination will hopefully have a renewed appreciation for these individuals who planted the roots of prejudice research in psychology and sociology.'
_________________________________

ResearchBlogging.orgWebster RJ, Saucier DA, & Harris RJ (2010). Before the measurement of prejudice: Early psychological and sociological papers on prejudice. Journal of the history of the behavioral sciences, 46 (3), 300-313 PMID: 20623744

Image courtesy of Wikipedia.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Hijacking a Plane: Garuda Indonesia

After two days of shopping streak, we decided it was a good idea to hijack a plane on the third day, being broke and all.


group photo with garuda indonesia plane model
haha. Mini plane.


No really. I did hijack a plane.

pushing plane wheels


or I tried to.


Okay la, actually we went to visit the Garuda Indonesia Headquarter.


I know what you are thinking: "yawn, boring"

I agree.


In fact, I was thinking the same thing until they brought me up to this baby!

A330-200.

aircraft up close


I mean it's my first time getting up close to a big plane (not the budget propeller plane sort where you board from outside instead of a tube connecting right into the plane) from outside the airport.

cleaning the aircraft


We were even elevated up to touch the tip of the plane tail. SO COOL!!!! (note: the vehicle being the electrical elevator)

IMG_2414


IMG_2421


Never would I imagine ever be able to do this in my life.

Don't know, touching the tail of a big ass plane? Just the sort of things that never cross my mind. :S


The engine was a sight.

engine in action


I intend to make this into a logo of some sort. It looks too cool.

We went to the repairing warehouse and found an actual plane engine, just the naked engine itself. It waasss MASSIVE!!!

engine


The price of this ugly looking machinery could literally (very possible) cost one million BMW cars.

Well I don't know the exact price but it has to be near there. So I heard from the engineers.

Then I saw this I just had to laugh, and snap a photo of it.

dilarang merokok


What a big "No Smoking" sign.


We climbed up the plane (without really asking for permission) and I had a try-out on their business class seatings.

sleeping in business class airbus 330-200


I could only dream of taking business class seatings everywhere I go. Thanks to the astronomical charges a middle-income citizen like me would only dream to earn every month.

One can dream yes?

first class tv


first class chair


These business class seatings just made me SOOO reluctant to ever go back to economy class, though they didn't look half bad to begin with, but it's hard to feel optimistic once you've been indulged, even for a little while.

garuda economy class


Then I went to explore the cockpit.

sitting in the cockpit


Run civilians! For I as captain. you. must. not. trust!


Oh wait, I think I have a photo Joe took of me somewhere.

*open folder of xxx months ago*


ah! here u go.

IMG_2398
"Look I'm stuck outside the plane, help!!!"

*delusional*


Back on land.

This was one of the first fleet of Garuda plane ever flown.

posing with garuda airline first aircraft
Not sure if it's still operational.


This was me and pretty Hanis doing a fake leap for photo.

me and hanis doing the leap


This was me doing an actual leap.

jump shot


This was a nice 3D painting.

pretty 3d painting


This was a model.

camwhore with plane model


Dinner that evening was somewhat the most spectacular we had in Indonesia *cough*, thanks to Garuda.

We stayed our last night in Mercure Convention Centre Ancol - a resort that has direct access to the beach and smack in the middle of a themepark. Quite family oriented.

Since it was our last dinner, we were too lazed to go out to scout for food, so we dressed up and dined in instead (at one of their restaurant in the hotel).

trio
Three pretty girls. Sorry don't have photos of the guys.


Everyone ordered something local, of which names I have already forgotten by now, but were utterly delicious!

pancake looking dish


indon food


indon kuey tiao


Me being me I wanted something western, but regretted the moment my meal came.

salmon sandwich


It said smoked salmon on the menu! I didn't know it was a sandwich!

Thankfully everyone was kind enough to let me nick their food here and there. nom nom nom.

My starter prawns were at least pretty good. Always loved wasabi mayo fried prawns.

prawn


Customary cam-whore before dinner.

dust and scratches portrait
I did some editing to make it more dreamy. This is the dust effect.


mezzotint portrait
the mezzotint effect


dinner time
no effect


pointilize portrait
pointilize effect.


My fav was the dust effect, so melodramatic. ^^


The next day we all chilled by the pool before our departure back home.

chilling


Niki (this fella die die ask me to link him, ai yo lazy lar! nah, merajuk budak) and I brought our Sony Cyber-shot TX5 to the pool for some water fun.

Didn't know waterproof cam can be so fun.

at the pool


niki on water slide
Niki and his camera (or was it mine?) down the kid slide


joe underwater


A video of the pool fun was conjured up somewhere in my baby's laptop on his macbook. Can't be bothered to look for it now, will upload it when I find it. So much fun! We laughed so hard cause three grown adults being silly in a kid's pool. can you imagine?

Soon it was time to leave. We checked out and left for the airport only to find our flight back to KL was delayed after checking in.

By four hours! (two hours delay announcement twice)

But Garuda Indonesia was so nice to check me into their business class lounge which clearly heightened our dampened mood.

garuda business class lounge

Woo hoo!!!

*Hearts*

Thank you Garuda!

*run towards comfy sofas*

Extras

Eye-catching studies that didn't make the final cut:

A basic visual perception computer training task shows some beneficial transfer to working memory among older participants. See earlier.

'...more educated [people] on average believe themselves to be more left wing than their actual beliefs on a substantive issue might suggest' [pdf]

Patients with Alzheimer's disease show lack of insight into their memory loss.

'How representative are experimental findings from American university students?' [pdf]

'This study explores the premise that shame episodes can have the properties of traumatic memories'.

Camera angle and amount of detail interact to influence jurors' perception of the authenticity of video-taped suspect confessions. When the video camera is focused on the suspect (rather than on the interrogator or on both interrogator and suspect) and the confession contains greater detail, the confession is judged to be more authentic and the suspect considered more likely to be guilty.

Effects of institutional care on children's brains (as measured with EEG) is reversible if they were removed from the institution and placed in foster care before the age of 24 months. Suggests there is a 'sensitive period after which brain activity in the face of severe psychosocial deprivation is less amenable to recovery'.

Botox to the facial muscles slows people's ability to read emotional sentences. '...our results suggest the need for further research on cognitive and emotional effects of cosmetic BTX injection'.

Disregard for children's developmental delays shown by mothers and medical professionals in a socio-economically deprived US sample.

Rapid induction of false memory for pictures.

Women with higher pitched voices show a stronger preference than average for deeper male voices.

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Wednesday, July 21, 2010

We Love Candy/Chocolate Bouquets!



We love designing unique gifts for special occasions in your life. Here are a few of those special gifts we designed for one of our corporate client. Delectable Ferrero Collection chocolates were wrapped in a bouquet style and placed in an elegant glass vase.

Each Ferrero Rocher Collection chocolate was wrapped in its very own petal.



For this Ferrero Rocher Chocolate Bouquet we used soft pastel colours and ribbons. It was held in a bouquet style.



We can design chocolate bouquets using different chocolates or candies and colour themes.Whether its for a wedding, birthday party, baby shower or corporate event, chocolate bouquets make unique and unforgetable centrepieces. They double as favours for your guests as well. Since each chocolate is wrapped individually, each guest can take one as a wedding/party favour.

We're happier when busy but our instinct is for idleness

Forced to wait for fifteen minutes at the airport luggage carousel leaves many of us miserable and irritated. Yet if we'd spent the same waiting time walking to the carousel we'd be far happier. That's according to Christopher Hsee and colleagues, who say we're happier when busy but that unfortunately our instinct is for idleness. Unless we have a reason for being active we choose to do nothing - an evolutionary vestige that ensures we conserve energy.

Consider Hsee's first study. His team offered 98 students a choice between delivering a completed questionnaire to a location that was a 15-minute round-trip walk away, or delivering it just outside the room and then waiting 15 minutes. A twist was that either the same or different types of chocolate snack bar were offered as a reward at the two locations.

If the same snack bar was offered at both locations then the majority (68 per cent) of students chose the lazy option, delivering the questionnaire just outside the room. By contrast, if a different (black vs. white) bar was offered at each location then the majority (59 per cent) chose the far away 'busy' option. This was the case even though earlier research showed both snack bar options were equally appealing, and even though the location of the two snack bar types was counterbalanced across participants. In other words, Hsee said, the students' instinct was for idleness, but when they were given a specious excuse for walking further, most of them took the busy option. Crucially, when asked afterwards, the students who'd taken the walk reported feeling significantly happier than the idle students, consistent with Hsee's theory that we're happier when busy (a repeat of the study in which students were allocated without choice to the idle or busy condition led to the same outcome - the busier students felt happier).

In a variant of this first study, students asked to evaluate a bracelet had the option of either spending fifteen minutes waiting time sitting idle or spending the same time disassembling the bracelet and rebuilding it. Those given the option of rebuilding it into its original configuration largely chose to sit idle - consistent with our having an instinct for idleness. By contrast, those told they could re-assemble the bracelet into a second, equally attractive and useful design tended to take up the challenge - again, an excuse, however superficial, for activity seems to be all it takes to spur us on. As before, those who spent the fifteen minutes busy subsequently reported feeling happier than those who sat idle.

Given that being busy makes us happier but that our instinct is for idleness, Hsee's team say there is a case for encouraging what they call 'futile busyness,' that is: 'busyness serving no purpose other than to prevent idleness. Such activity is more realistic than constructive busyness and less evil than destructive busyness.'

The researchers proceed to argue that, unfortunately, most people will not be tempted by futile busyness, so there's a paternalistic case for governments and organisations tricking us into more activity: 'housekeepers may increase the happiness of their idle housekeepers by letting in some mice and prompting the housekeepers to clean up. Governments may increase the happiness of idle citizens by having them build bridges that are actually useless.' In fact, according to Hsee's team, such interventions already exist, with some airports having deliberately increased the walk to the luggage carousel so as to reduce the time passengers spend waiting idly for luggage to arrive.
_________________________________

ResearchBlogging.orgHsee CK, Yang AX, & Wang L (2010). Idleness aversion and the need for justifiable busyness. Psychological science : a journal of the American Psychological Society / APS, 21 (7), 926-30 PMID: 20548057

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Pray What You Pray

Have you ever paid attention to the prayers of Paul? Or Jesus?
Those prayers are quite different from what we tend to pray.
Those prayers are not about material things or for things to go easy. I would say they are focused on knowing Christ and being rooted in His love.

In Ephesians and Colossians, Paul prays for these things for the church:
-- the Spirit of wisdom and revelation
-- that the eyes of their hearts may be enlightened
-- that they may know the hope to which he has called them
-- for strength in their inner being
-- that Christ may dwell in their hearts through faith
-- that they will be rooted and established in love
-- that they will have power to grasp the depth of the love of Christ
-- that they may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God
-- that they will be filled with the knowledge of his will
-- that they will bear fruit in every good work
-- that they grow in the knowledge of God
-- that they would have great endurance and patience
-- that they would be joyful and thankful

And, Jesus' famous prayer in Luke:
-- not my will, but thy will

Jakarta - Bandung: Shopping Heaven

Continue from this post.


I never knew what to expect from Jakarta, or Indonesia per se.

Yes I've been to Bali, twice, but the island is like a whole different country from the rest of Indonesia, what being 80% of Hindu population on the island. It's not even a Muslim area, nor contain any of the Muslim culture.

rupiah
money for diving

No, you know what, I was wrong. I have been to Indonesia before this.

Now I remember *knock head*, silly Nicole.

I've traveled to Manado twice, in North Sulawesi, it was Bunaken and Lembeh (each on separate ends of Sulawesi) respectively.


So wow, I have, in total, traveled to Indonesia for four times now. o.O

But then again the latter two were diving trips. So you can't really say you've seen the country and experience the culture when you only been under the sea and around the reef in some parts of that country.

swimming upside down


(Ahh good times)


This time, heading to Jakarta (and Bandung) was going to be something new for me, no diving, no island life, just true ol' city with all the pollution and people and traffic jams.

jakarta local tuk tuk


I love visiting cities. I find that big cities bring out the worst in people, and if you experienced the worst and don't mind it, then the country ain't too bad a country to live in. Or at least that's my logic.

wanted good man


wanted good woman


It's also where the best development of the country are clustered.

jakarta local tuk tuk


For the first time, I travel not for scenery,

train track


little did I expect either that I wasn't going on this trip for its culture or food or party scene, under a normal circumstance, I would have been really upset being sent such a trip, but this time it was surprisingly enlightening.

For the first time in my life, I travel for shopping!

You hear me right. SHOPPING!

all our purchase


Who knew Jakarta would be such a hot spot for shoppers!

I never spent so much time on a trip shopping before, imagine 60% of trip time just passing money over to the cashier or taking clothes into the changing room to try out. *repeat actions*

spanking
Niki, whose butt are you spanking?


They moment we arrived, we were driven all the way by DayTrans to Bandung - a three-hour journey from Jakarta airport.

We checked in to Novotel in Bandung and went out for shopping, spending the rest of the afternoon we have whizzing in and out of shops and outlets.

There was this shop we stumbled upon by chance at our last stop and instantly fell in love with the items on sale, there were so much to buy. It was also the only shop that had us all by our wallets.

group purchase


The next day, each of us wore something we newly purchased the evening before.

group photo in accor


oink cap
niki - new oink hat


joe with tweet hat
joe - new tweet hat


I wore almost everything new, except for the shoes, socks and short pants.

chic look


Even the bag was new.

le sportsac fake bag


What do you think of my Le Sportsac bag?

Cool eh?

wide angel camwhore


Only cost me RM30.

But then it's broken two weeks after the trip. -.-


Oh well, you get what you paid for.

It was meant to be bought for fun anyway.

wink


This should be the crudest shirt I ever own (or -ed).

Then it's another 3 hours back to Jakarta (haha crazy I know).

It's like we drove 3 hours to a city just to shop, stay a night and come back, which we did.

Back in Jakarta, we checked in for the night at Mercure Jakarta Kota.

My room was pretty spacious for one person to sleep in.

my room


But I ain't complaining. :p

chocolate
Oh look, complimentary chocolates! Didn't taste nice anyway.


And then it was out for more shopping again.


For shoppers around, note this location down in Jakarta: Tebet.

Probably one of the best shopping destination if you're looking for boutique designs, funky t-shirts, jeans, shoes, etc.

I got this cute pink shirt from Tebet.

cam whore in toilet


I wasn't very impressed with the traffic in Jarkata though, a bit put off if not. It's insane, hectic, and nausea-inducing. If you get stuck with a lost driver, then hallelujah, may god be with you.

;)

In the mean time, chill with a popular local drink - jus alpukat (aka Avocado Juice)

avocado drink


while I continue to write for tomorrow's post on our visit to Garuda Indonesia Headquarter!


We get to hijack a plane!!! :D