Negativity bias

Negativity bias is the name for a psychological phenomenon by which humans pay more attention to and give more weight to negative rather than positive experiences or other kinds of information. This shows up in a number of domains, including:

The definitive publication on negativity bias in the field of psychology is by Roy Baumeister, Ellen Bratslavsky, Catrin Finkenauer, and Kathleen Vohs[5] and the phenomenon is often referred to by the paper's title: Bad is Stronger than Good. Another key paper on this bias, developed simultaneously and independently, was published in the same year by Rozin and Royzman.[6] Prospect theory, developed by Kahneman and Tversky, is an older and independent area of research that produces many of the same results.[7]

Is bad stronger than good?

A more apt description of the theory is that bad is more attention-getting than good. Positive events exert effects in other ways:

Nonetheless, when assessing an immediate situation, it does seem that negative information and negative events predominate, and this has significant implications for everything from aesthetics to trauma recovery to the study of stress and biochemistry.

See also

Sources

  1. ^ Fiske, S.T. (1980). Attention and Weight in Person Perception: The impact of negative and extreme information. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 38, 889–906.
  2. ^ Wason, P.C. (1959). The Processing of Positive and Negative Information, The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 11 (2), 92–107.
  3. ^ Tversky, A., & Kahneman, D. (1984). Choices, Values, Frames, American Psychologist, 39 (4), 341-50.
  4. ^ Levy, J.S. (2003). Applications of Prospect Theory to Political Science, Synthese, 135 (2), 215-41.
  5. ^ Baumeister, Roy; Ellen Bratslavsky, Catrin Finkenauer, and Kathleen Vohs (2001). "Bad is Stronger than Good". Review of General Psychology 5 (4): 323–370. http://dionysus.psych.wisc.edu/Lit/Articles/BaumeisterR2001a.pdf. 
  6. ^ Rozin, Paul; Royzman, Edward B. (2001). "Negativity bias, negativity dominance, and contagion". Personality and Social Psychology Review (5): 296–320. http://dionysus.psych.wisc.edu/lit/Articles/RozinP2001a.pdf. 
  7. ^ Kahneman, D., & Tversky, A. (1979). Prospect Theory: An Analysis of Decision under Risk, Econometrica, XLVII, 263-291