What changes is your doctor going to make on clothing choices by survivors based on this? Nothing is not a valid answer. As long as they don't make me wear doctor whites, that would totally destroy my cognitive ability.
http://youarenotsosmart.com/2014/06/06/yanss-podcast-25-how-the-clothes-you-wear-change-your-perceptions-and-behaviors-with-hajo-adam/
When you work from home, do you produce better results in pajamas or
professional attire? Do casual Fridays damage productivity? Does a
jeans-and-T-shirt startup have an edge over its business-casual
competitor?
Researchers are just now getting to the bottom of questions like
these. The answers depend on the symbolic power the particular item of
clothing has in the mind of the particular wearer, but the answer to
each question is never “not at all.”
Up until now, most psychological investigations into
clothing have dealt with how clothes communicate status or facilitate
rituals. For instance, if you put a person in a police uniform and have
them ask questions or make demands you’ll get completely different
results than if you had the same person wear a pirate costume. But what
about the person in the uniform or the costume? Are the clothes
affecting his or her behavior, thoughts, judgments, and decisions? The
evidence collected so far suggests that yes, the clothes we wear affect
our minds in ways we never notice. In fact, it’s likely the same person
in the same situation in the same clothes will behave differently
depending just on the color of those clothes.
In
this episode of the YANSS Podcast we explore enclothed cognition, and I
interview one of the researchers who discovered the phenomenon. Hajo
Adam, a professor of management and researcher at Rice University’s
School of Business, explains how he and Adam Galinsky, a business
professor at Columbia University, conducted the studies that showed
people wearing lab coats perform better on tests of mental ability than
people wearing street clothes.
After the interview, I discuss a news story about how eyewitness
testimony gets progressively less reliable the farther away the eyes of
the witness from the crime.
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