Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Want To Stick To New Year's Resolution? Keep It Secret

Darpan News Desk IANS, 29 Dec, 2015 12:30 PM
    All geared up for the New Year bash and ready to declare your resolution? Just hold on. New research has found that the secret to a successful New Year's resolution may lie in, well, keeping it a secret or at best asking yourself a question.
     
    So if you want 2016 to give your body a sexy shape, a question like, “Will I exercise -- yes or no?” may be more effective than declaring, “I will exercise”, the study said.
     
    The trick of asking a question works also in people whose behaviour you want to influence, the researchers said.
     
    "Will you exercise this year?" That simple question can be a game-changing technique for people who want to influence their own or others' behavior, said the study spanning 40 years of research.
     
    The research looked at more than 100 studies examining the 'question-behavior effect,' a phenomenon in which asking people about performing a certain behaviour influences whether they do it in the future. 
     
    The effect has been shown to last more than six months after questioning.
     
    "If you question a person about performing a future behaviour, the likelihood of that behavior happening will change," said study co-author Dave Sprott, senior associate dean of Carson College of Business, Washington State University.
     
    The basic idea is that when people are asked 'Will you recycle?' it causes a psychological response that can influence their behavior when they get a chance to recycle. 
     
    The question reminds them that recycling is good for the environment but may also make them feel uncomfortable if they are not recycling. 
     
    Thus, they become motivated to recycle to alleviate their feelings of discomfort.
     
    Overall, the researchers' findings suggest questioning is a relatively simple yet effective technique to produce consistent, significant changes across a wide domain of behaviours. 
     
    "We found the effect is strongest when questions are used to encourage behaviour with personal and socially accepted norms, such as eating healthy foods or volunteering," first author Eric Spangenberg from University of California, Irvine, noted.
     
    The researchers found the question-behaviour effect to be strongest when questions are administered via a computer or paper-and-pencil survey, and when questions are answered with a response of 'yes' or 'no.' They also found that those using the technique are better off not providing a specific time frame for the target behaviour.
     
    The study appeared in the Journal of Consumer Psychology.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    The Girl Scouts Are Going Digital For The First Time To Sell You Cookies

    The Girl Scouts Are Going Digital For The First Time To Sell You Cookies
    For the first time in nearly 100 years, Girl Scouts of the USA will allow its young go-getters to push their wares using a mobile app or personalized websites.

    The Girl Scouts Are Going Digital For The First Time To Sell You Cookies

    White cup makes your coffee more intense

    White cup makes your coffee more intense
    Can the colour of the mug influence the taste of your coffee? Yes, say researchers, suggesting that coffee tastes more intense when served in a white cup....

    White cup makes your coffee more intense

    Math can predict how body fights disease

    Math can predict how body fights disease
    Researchers, using mathematical models, have defined for the first time how powerfully immune cells respond to infection and disease....

    Math can predict how body fights disease

    Use a barcode scanner on your body parts and expect trouble

    Use a barcode scanner on your body parts and expect trouble
    Here's an "amusing trick", suggested by a reader. You get a barcode for Apple Inc. from the internet and glue it on a can of beans at your supermarket. ...

    Use a barcode scanner on your body parts and expect trouble

    17th century Polish 'vampire' graves found

    17th century Polish 'vampire' graves found
    Potential "vampires" in 17th-18th century Poland were buried with rocks and sickles across their bodies to ward off evil, scientists have discovered....

    17th century Polish 'vampire' graves found

    'I Saw Humans On Mars In 1979': Ex-NASA Employee

    'I Saw Humans On Mars In 1979': Ex-NASA Employee
    A woman claiming to be a former NASA employee has stated that while watching some footage, she saw two humans walking on the Red Planet towards the Viking Mars lander in 1979.

    'I Saw Humans On Mars In 1979': Ex-NASA Employee