That letter might have something valuable in it, say a ten pound note.  
Returning the letter, rather than opening it and keeping any goodies inside, 
is, in one sense, altruistic.  Suppose Edward, who lives in the upscale 
neighborhood returns the letter.  So does Sammy, from a deprived neighborhood.  
Are Edward and Sammy equally altruistic? 

Cheers,

Karl L. Wuensch


-----Original Message-----
From: Jim Clark [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, August 16, 2012 12:20 PM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: Re: [tips] Are Poor People Less Altruistic?

Hi

And how about the tidiness of the streets?  Would amounts of litter differ 
between sections of town, making visibility of letter markedly different?

Or the availability of mailboxes?  Or people more likely to work in offices 
where they could easily drop off a letter?  Or number of stay-at-home people 
with time to take letter to post office? ...

Fun game!

Take care
Jim




James M. Clark
Professor of Psychology and Chair
204-786-9757
204-774-4134 Fax
[email protected]

>>> Michael Palij <[email protected]> 16-Aug-12 10:07 AM >>>
Perhaps it should not come as a surprise that new research coming from the 
University College of London (UCL) focuses on the relationship of class or SES 
differences with altruism.  Using Milgram's "lost letter" procedure, the UCL 
researchers showed that letters dropped in wealthier neighborhoods were 
returned at a higher rate than lower class/SES neighborhood (they divided 
neighborhoods into quartiles with the first quartile representing the 
wealthiest neighborhoods and the difference in return rate between this Q1 and 
Q3 and Q4 [the poorest] were significant).  One popular media account is 
provided by Science Daily; see:

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/08/120815175047.htm 

The original research report published in PLoS One is available here:
http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0043294 

I leave it to the interested reader to come up with objections to conclusions 
as well as study design (e.g., variables left out of the equation) but 
behaviorists might wonder why an internal state (altruism) is attributed as the 
cause of non-returned letters rather than, say, worse mail service in poorer 
neighborhoods or other environmental factors.

NOTE:  Why does Q1, the wealthiest neighborhood, have the largest N (N=105) 
than the other quartiles?

NOTE#2:  There could be another explanation but the researchers chose not to 
investigate it.  It is suggested in the following quote from the analysis in 
the Method section:

|We had also planned on using neighbourhood crime scores as a predictor 
|variable to attempt to disentangle the effects of income deprivation 
|and crime on levels of altruism, but due to strong collinearity (r 
|=0.90) between these two variables only income deprivation was used in 
|the final model.

One wonders why income deprivation wasn't left out and crime score used.  I 
guess they don't consider neighborhood crime levels as being relevant to 
picking up a letter on the sidewalk of a crime ridden neighborhood..

-Mike Palij
New York University
[email protected] 

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