People who control their desires can face social isolation

self-control
Credit: CC0 Public Domain

Desire is part of human nature, and being vulnerable to desire is part of what differentiates humans from machines. However, a new international study has found that individuals who are better able to resist their desires are perceived as more robotic and dehumanized.

"Imagine a colleague with iron self-control—a person who has their entire day planned down to five-minute increments to eat and even to run to the bathroom. This person never sleeps in, never stops to chat with co-workers, and never misses a scheduled gym session," said Abigail Scholer, an associate professor of psychology at the University of Waterloo who co-authored the report. "Sure, they're probably productive, but how do they fare socially?"

That's the question asked by an international team of academics, including Scholer Waterloo alumni Franki Kung from Psychological Sciences at Purdue University and Justin P. Brienza from The University of Queensland Business School. Samantha P. Lapka of Purdue also contributed to the six studies involving 2,007 people.

"Whereas past research shows that people high in self-control enjoy a broad range of benefits, we're beginning to see that such people also experience some social trade-offs," said Kung. "They are more likely to be seen as robotic and less-than-human. Humans have flaws, are vulnerable to passions, and we tend to gravitate to people like that—even if they're not as reliable as those with a high degree of ."

This dehumanization has potential social consequences. The report notes that a person seen as less human is more likely to be socially rejected.

"What we're finding is that even if self-restraint and competence are seen as virtues leading to success, they do not necessarily translate into social success, as that person may be perceived as lacking some fundamental human qualities," said Scholer.

The research was published on PsyArXiv.

More information: Samantha Lapka et al, Determined yet Dehumanized: People Higher in Self-Control are Seen as More Robotic, PsyArXiv (2022). DOI: 10.31234/osf.io/sp8aj

Citation: People who control their desires can face social isolation (2022, July 7) retrieved 16 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2022-07-people-desires-social-isolation.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

'I didn't feel as if I fitted in at all': The real life challenges of social mobility

90 shares

Feedback to editors