Sarah
High
Tasha Thomas
SEGL 101
October 12, 2012
Summary
and Analysis of “The Bipolar Epidemic and the Chameleon Effect” Chapter 5 in
“Sway”
In Sway, The Irresistible Pull of Irrational Behavior,
The Brafman brothers are breaking down many examples of ways people can and are
being swayed. People act irrationally
without recognizing what is going on.
Ori and Rom Brafman are even trying to sway their readers into believing
that everyone acts irrationally.
In chapter five the brothers use many examples of the
sway diagnosis bias and labeling. The
focus is on the epidemic of bipolar diagnosis in children from 1994 to 2003. In each example they are saying that whether we
label people negative or positive, they are going to take on whatever their
label is, and are also saying that people are swayed into how they treat others
based on their labels. The Brafman
brothers are calling this the Pygmalion effect, taking on positive traits that
others assigned to them, and the Golem effect, which is how we take on negative
traits. In this chapter of Sway, many of
the examples they use are clear illustrations of diagnosis bias, while others
can be controversial or just don't fit in under this type of sway.
.
Using the bipolar example is very impressive. The authors went into extensive detail with
this, showing many examples of research on it.
When things like bipolar came out into the public through media and
research, eyebrows were raised and people started to ask more questions about
it. But I’m wondering if these children
and adults were already showing symptoms of bipolarism and didn’t want to ask
the doctors about it because they felt they would be judged? Or when the media focused on it, they thought
it was ok to question their minds?
“Primed to be on the lookout for bipolar disorder, psychiatrists started
seeing it everywhere they looked.”(94)
So, maybe it was that the psychiatrists doing the research that were
trying to sway these patients into believing that they suffer from bipolar and
other mental disorders because of a little bit of emotion in their lives. If this is the case, the patients were
labeled bipolar and this shows what the Brafman brothers are calling the
chameleon effect.
When the authors talked about the medication usage to
treat bipolar, and it showed that research proved that the medication only
worked a minimal amount of time, I think this was brilliantly put into this
chapter. “It turned out that when all
the studies were aggregated and all the data meticulously analyzed, SSRIs were
no more clinically effective than placebos in making patients-either kids or
adults-feel better"(96-97) This
really showed me that patients were truly being swayed to believe they were
bipolar. The majority were not actually
chemically and hormonally bipolar. In
the end, they were diagnosed and started acting the part.
Another example they used was putting military members
from Israel into “command potential” categories versus them taking their
comprehensive tests and comparing their scores with the categories they were
put into. The commanders were trying to
prove that once labeled something, you will start acting it. Yes, this is true. But when it came time for the soldiers to
take this written test to acquire their new knowledge on what they learned
while at training, the military members tested on what they were labeled. It is
quoted, “Without realizing it, the trainees had taken on the characteristics of
the diagnoses ascribed to them.”(99) Is
it because the training officers didn’t want to waste their time giving quality
and equal training to those who they were told didn’t already show major
potential, or is this just how the soldiers really were? Had the soldiers not been diagnosed certain
ways, maybe all of them would have gotten equal training and tested to their
true potential.
The most interesting example is when researchers had men
call women with only given a bio and a fake picture of them. The conversations went as well as what the
men thought the women would be based on the picture. I don’t understand why men think because a
woman is beautiful she would be more outgoing and easy to talk to, or because a
woman is just ordinary she would be somewhat dull. But this shows me true labeling. “Once the men formed this opinion, it
affected every aspect of how they interacted with the women.”(103) When people have certain opinions of others
that’s how they start to be treated. The
way you treat others, is the way they will start to feel and begin to
interact. People feed off another’s
feelings towards them. So, of course if
a man calls a woman and is short with her and not very engaged in the
conversation, the woman won’t be either.
This section in the chapter is perfect for showing that when labels are
put on people, because of the actions of others, those being labeled will
become what others think they are.
However, when senior citizens were given a test to see if
the way they felt about old age would actually affect them later on in life, I
am not seeing how this example is good for this type of sway. “Negative and external feelings about old
age, in other words, can actually make people physically age faster.”(105)
I understand that if you constantly are speaking negative about things,
that’s the way life will turn out, but when you find something positive in
every situation, there will be more positive outcomes. The more stress you bring into your life,
more stress is to follow. But how is
this being swayed by labeling or diagnosis bias? Maybe these elderly people just aged well or
aged a little more quickly. I can see
this being swayed by their emotions, in that their emotions have affected their
overall internal being. If you say it,
it will be, but not labeling. I feel
like the authors should have gone into more detail with this example to help
the audience understand where they were coming from.
The “Love Bridge” is a section that I found very
interesting. It is showing a different
side of the sway being portrayed. Is it
merely saying that the men crossing the shaky bridge are more adventurous than
others? And by saying this, they are being
labeled as go getters and risk takers.
But by saying the only reason the men called the woman was because their
adrenaline and heart rate were elevated, because of the rush, I don’t
necessarily agree with. “Physiologically speaking, the adrenaline rush you
experience in such a situation is the same feeling of excitement you experience
when you develop a crush on someone.”(108)
These men have already been said to be risk takers, so I believe most
risk takers would take a chance at a phone conversation with a woman,
regardless of walking across this enormously high bridge or not.
Although throughout this chapter, I would have liked to
have seen more detail about the studies done, I believe that Ori and Rom
Brafman have proven that the sway of labeling and diagnosis bias exists. Ori understands the mind and how people
think, while Rom is a deep thinker and can pick apart other’s thoughts. They both have the background to do the
research, and by the end of this chapter, they have given enough evidence to
say that “we’re all psychological chameleons,” (109) who are always swaying and
being swayed.
1. Does the paper follow proper MLA formatting?
ReplyDeleteyes
2. Does the beginning of the summary make clear the text, its author, and title?
How could the writer improve it?
yes
3. Does the summary indicate the thesis of the essay? How could it be more clear? I believe I have a clear thesis.
4. Does the analysis contribute beyond restating the summary? Is it focused and
clear? How could the writer improve it?
yes, I believe I analyed well, to the point.
5. Are there sufficient quotes to support the summary and analysis, and are they incorporated correctly? Indicate how the amount and use of textual evidence could be improved.
I think I used a good amount of quotes in each paragraph that went along with my points I was making in each paragraph.