The effects of temperature on prosocial and antisocial behaviour: A review and meta-analysis

被引:5
作者
Lynott, Dermot [1 ,2 ]
Corker, Katherine [3 ]
Connell, Louise [1 ,2 ]
O'Brien, Kerry [4 ]
机构
[1] Maynooth Univ, Dept Psychol, Maynooth, Kildare, Ireland
[2] Univ Lancaster, Dept Psychol, Lancaster, England
[3] Grand Valley State Univ, Dept Psychol, Allendale, MI USA
[4] Monash Univ, Sch Social Sci, Melbourne, Vic, Australia
关键词
aggression; antisocial; behaviour; priming; prosocial; temperature; EXPERIENCING PHYSICAL WARMTH; AMBIENT-TEMPERATURE; CLIMATE-CHANGE; FORMING IMPRESSIONS; PUBLICATION BIAS; VIOLENT CRIME; AGGRESSION; HEAT; COLD; HOT;
D O I
10.1111/bjso.12626
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Research from the social sciences suggests an association between higher temperatures and increases in antisocial behaviours, including aggressive, violent, or sabotaging behaviours, and represents a heat-facilitates-aggression perspective. More recently, studies have shown that higher temperature experiences may also be linked to increases in prosocial behaviours, such as altruistic, sharing, or cooperative behaviours, representing a warmth-primes-prosociality view. However, across both literatures, there have been inconsistent findings and failures to replicate key theoretical predictions, leaving the status of temperature-behaviour links unclear. Here we review the literature and conduct meta-analyses of available empirical studies that have either prosocial (e.g., monetary reward, gift giving, helping behaviour) or antisocial (self-rewarding, retaliation, sabotaging behaviour) behavioural outcome variables, with temperature as an independent variable. In an omnibus multivariate analysis (total N = 4577) with 80 effect sizes, we found that there was no reliable effect of temperature on the behavioural outcome measured. Further, we find little support for either the warmth-primes-prosociality view or the heat-facilitates-aggression view. There were no reliable effects if we consider separately the type of behavioural outcome (prosocial or antisocial), different types of temperature experience (haptic or ambient), or potential interactions with the experimental social context (positive, neutral, or negative). We discuss how these findings affect the status of existing theoretical perspectives and provide specific suggestions advancing research in this area.
引用
收藏
页码:1177 / 1214
页数:38
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