Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Every-Body/One

| | 2 comments



Have you ever had to comfort a friend during an uncomfortable or embarrassing experience?  What is one of the most common things you tell you friend?

"Oh don't worry [friend's name], it happens to everyone!"

As social beings, we take comfort in knowing that even in our not-so-shining moments, everyone else has experienced the same thing at one point or another.  Therefore, we really don't have worry because it happens to everyone else!

Does taking a fall in the hallway in front of your crush really happen to everyone else?  Maybe it does but maybe it doesn’t. However, telling ourselves that it does is a very common thought amongst most people. The tendency to overestimate the extent that other people share our behaviors, opinions, and beliefs is called the false-consensus effect (Ross, Greene, & House, 1977).

Although it may seem silly that we should inflate how many other people share our thoughts and beliefs, it's a form of defense for our self-esteem.  As previously mentioned, we take comfort in knowing that the majority (whether it’s other people in general or people our age or in our particular situation) feels the same way we do.  The more people agree with our belief or opinion, the more we feel that the reason most people agree is because it is the right  belief or opinion.  The more people have experienced what we are going through, the more we feel that it is not a personal but rather global experience that everyone else has undergone and/or is going through.

Recently, I have fallen prey to the false-consensus effect.  One statement that I have been tossing around in my head lately is that the majority of other seniors at Southwestern are at a loss with what they are going to do with their lives.   I tell myself that I am not the only one who is now questioning my graduate school interests and mostly everyone else is experiencing the same dilemma in their academic career.  Given that not knowing what I want to do with my life puts me in a predicament of uncertainty, I want to know that I am not alone in feeling this way.  Therefore, I tell myself that everyone else is feeling the same way (false-consensus effect) so that I don't feel like something is personally wrong with me (self-defense).

n = 389

Ross, L., Greene, D., & House, P. (1977). The false consensus effect: An egocentric bias in social perception and attribution processes. Journal Of Experimental Social Psychology, 13(3), 279-301. doi:10.1016/0022-1031(77)90049-X



2 comments:

  1. As a fellow graduating senior, I too, have fallen prey to the false-consensus effect. I like to tell myself that nobody else knows what they are going to do once they graduate either. This notion coupled with the many articles my parents send me telling me about the lack of jobs available to those in our post-graduate situation make the idea of graduation that much more petrifying. As such, I like to make myself fell better by stating that I am just one of many that fell this way. If all else fails, I am not above mooching off of my fellow graduates that are successful while becoming a barista at Starbucks (although I hope it doesn't come to that).

    ReplyDelete
  2. While this is problem definitely doesn't happen to everyone, in these trying times uncertainty does effect a LARGE number of us bachelor students. Most of the people I know who have graduated with a bachelor's degree are now working as waiters or are doing secretarial work. The folks I know who have gotten certifications in welding or other hands-on jobs are making BANK though. So if all else fails, quick certifications are a good plan to fall back on.

    ReplyDelete

 
Twitter Facebook Dribbble Tumblr Last FM Flickr Behance