纠错
置顶

Individual Performance and the Presence of Others

纠错

Directions: An introductory sentence for a brief summary of the passage is provided below. Complete the summary by selecting the THREE answer choices that express the most important ideas in the passage. Some sentences do not belong in the summary because they express ideas that are not presented in the passage or are minor ideas in the passage.

This question is worth 2 points.

Drag your answer choices to the spaces where they belong. To remove an answer choice, click on it.To review the passage, click VIEW TEXT.

Social psychologists noticed that a person can perform different by oneself or by the presence of others.

显示答案
正确答案: A D E
  • A.
    When people are present, the performance of individuals generally improves on tasks they already do well but worsens on tasks they generally do poorly.
  • B.
    Studies show that bicycle racers pedal faster when they are competing against other racers, but children wind fishing reels slower when in the presence of others than when alone.
  • C.
    People's performance on a task is more affected by the presence of others when those others are engaged in the same task than when the others are passive spectators.
  • D.
    When people work together on a common task but no one's contribution is measured, there is a tendency for individuals to work less hard than if they were working alone.
  • E.
    Social loafing decreases under certain conditions, such as when the performance of the group or its members is evaluated or when a positive outcome matters to the participants.
  • F.
    While social loafing occurs in almost all groups across cultures, the extent to which it occurs in any particular group depends on the individual personalities of the group's members.

我的笔记 编辑笔记

  • 原文
  • 译文
  • A person's performance on tasks can be enhanced or impaired by the mere presence of others, and a person's behavior as part of a group can be quite different from the person's behavior when acting alone.



    In certain cases, individual performance can be either helped or hindered by the physical presence of others. The term social facilitation refers to any effect on performance, whether positive or negative, that can be attributed to the presence of others. Research on this phenomenon has focused on two types of effects: audience effects (the impact of passive spectators on performance) and coaction effects (the effect on performance caused by the presence of other people engaged in the same task).



    In one of the first studies in social psychology, psychologist Norman Triplett looked at coaction effects. He had observed in official bicycle records that bicycle racers pedaled faster when they were pedaling against other racers than when they were racing against the clock. Was this pattern of performance peculiar to competitive bicycling? Or was it part of a more general phenomenon whereby people work faster and harder in the presence of others than when performing alone? Triplett set up a study in which he told 40 children to wind fishing reels as quickly as possible under two conditions: alone or in the presence of other children performing the same task. He found that the children worked faster when other reel turners were present than when they performed alone.



    Later studies on social facilitation found just the opposite effect--that the presence of others, whether co-acting or just watching, could hurt or diminish individual performance. Social psychologist Robert Zajonc proposed an explanation for these seemingly contradictory effects. He reasoned that we become aroused by the presence of others and that arousal facilitates the dominant response, the one most natural to us. On simple tasks and on tasks at which we are skilled, the dominant response is to perform effectively. However, on tasks that are difficult or tasks we are just learning, the incorrect response (making a mistake or not performing effectively) is dominant. This reasoning accounts for the repeated findings that, in the presence of others, performance improves on tasks that people do easily but suffers on difficult tasks. Other researchers have suggested that concern over the observers' evaluation is what most affects people's performance, particularly if they expect a negative evaluation.



    What happens in cooperative tasks when two or more people are working together instead of competing? Do they increase their effort or slack off? Researcher Bibb Latan used the term social loafing to refer to people's tendency to exert less effort when working with others on a common task than when they work alone. Social loafing occurs in situations where no one person's contribution to the group can be identified and individuals are neither praised for a good performance nor blamed for a poor one. In one experiment, Latan and others asked male students to shout and clap as loudly as possible, first alone and then in groups. In groups of two, individuals made only 71 percent of the noise they had made alone; in groups of four, each student put forth 51 percent of his solo effort; and with six students, each made only a 40 percent effort.



    Harkins and Jackson found that social loafing disappeared when participants in a group believed that each person's performance could be monitored and evaluated; indeed, even the idea that the group performance may be evaluated against some standard can be sufficient to eliminate the loafing effect. When a group is relatively small and group evaluation is important, some members will even expend extra effort if they know that some of their coworkers are unwilling, unreliable, or incompetent to perform well. Moreover, social loafing is unlikely when participants can evaluate their own individual contribution or when they have a personal stake in the outcome. It is also unlikely when participants feel that the task is challenging or when they are working with close friends or teammates. Some 80 experimental studies have been conducted on social loafing in diverse cultures. Based on evidence these studies have produced, social loafing probably occurs in almost all cultures.


  • 暂无译文

  • 官方解析
  • 网友贡献解析
  • 标签
    1 感谢 不懂
    解析

    段落大意:

    第一段:引出话题:一个人的表现会受到其他人的影响(±),以及人在群体中vs单独的表现不同

    第二段:抛出social facilitation定义,以及研究它的两种效应:audience effects coaction effects

    第三段:NTcoaction effects的观察和实验,得出结论:人们一起做同样的事情的时候做的更快

    第四段:Robert Zajonc——人们会被激发。简单和熟练的任务,主要回应是展现高效; 困难或刚学会的任务,主要回应是犯错误——performance在简单任务中提升,在困难任务中下降

    第五段:抛出social loafing”定义,以及它的发生条件和实验举例

    第六段:减少或消除social loafing”的情况介绍

    答案:ADE

    题型:小结题

    解析:

    选项A对应第四段内容;

    选项B对应第三段,但是题干后半句信息错误;

    选项C对应第二段,但原文并未进行比较more affected by”;

    选项D对应第五段内容;

    选项E对应第六段内容;

    选项F对应第六段最后,但是未提及题干中后半句内容the extent to which it occurs in any particular group depends on the individual personalities of the group's members.

题目讨论

如果对题目有疑问,欢迎来提出你的问题,热心的小伙伴会帮你解答。

最新提问