Caruso Eugene M, Burns Zachary C, Converse Benjamin A
Booth School of Business, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637;
School of Management, University of San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94117;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Aug 16;113(33):9250-5. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1603865113. Epub 2016 Aug 1.
To determine the appropriate punishment for a harmful action, people must often make inferences about the transgressor's intent. In courtrooms and popular media, such inferences increasingly rely on video evidence, which is often played in "slow motion." Four experiments (n = 1,610) involving real surveillance footage from a murder or broadcast replays of violent contact in professional football demonstrate that viewing an action in slow motion, compared with regular speed, can cause viewers to perceive an action as more intentional. This slow motion intentionality bias occurred, in part, because slow motion video caused participants to feel like the actor had more time to act, even when they knew how much clock time had actually elapsed. Four additional experiments (n = 2,737) reveal that allowing viewers to see both regular speed and slow motion replay mitigates the bias, but does not eliminate it. We conclude that an empirical understanding of the effect of slow motion on mental state attribution should inform the life-or-death decisions that are currently based on tacit assumptions about the objectivity of human perception.
为了确定对有害行为的适当惩罚,人们常常必须对违规者的意图进行推断。在法庭和大众媒体中,此类推断越来越依赖视频证据,而这些视频证据通常以“慢动作”播放。四项实验(n = 1610),涉及一起谋杀案的真实监控录像或职业橄榄球比赛中暴力接触的转播回放,结果表明,与正常速度相比,以慢动作观看一个行为会使观众觉得该行为更具蓄意性。这种慢动作蓄意性偏差的出现,部分原因是慢动作视频让参与者感觉行为者有更多时间采取行动,即使他们知道实际经过了多少时间。另外四项实验(n = 2737)表明,让观众同时观看正常速度和慢动作回放可以减轻这种偏差,但并不能消除它。我们得出结论,对慢动作对心理状态归因影响的实证理解,应该为目前基于对人类感知客观性的默认假设而做出的生死攸关的决策提供参考。