(July 29, 2015) Like
to go your own way? Most of us actually prefer to follow the pack, according to
UBC research.
That’s one of the outcomes from a study published in
Evolution and Human Behavior that examines how mathematical models predict
human behaviour.
The research tested theories about when people should rely
on “social information” – information that we learn vicariously from others –
and when we should choose to go it alone.
“People are conformist – and that’s a good thing for
cultural evolution,” said Michael Muthukrishna, a Vanier and Liu Scholar and
recent PhD recipient from UBC’s department of psychology. “By being conformist,
we copy the things that are popular in the world. And those things are often
good and useful.”
For example, most people don’t understand how germs can
cause disease – but they know they should wash their hands after using the
bathroom. “Our whole world is made up of things that we do that are good for
us, but we don’t know why,” said Muthukrishna. “And we don’t need to know why.
We just need to know that most people do those things.”
The research also found that people with higher IQs don’t
follow the pack as much as others – but when they do, they do so more
strategically. In other words, smarter people tend to take their own path most
of the time, because they think they have the correct answer. When they’re
unsure, however, they are more willing than those with average IQs to follow
the majority.