This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Allie Wilkinson. Got a minute?
Lady Gaga's fake fingernails and Justin Timberlake's partly eaten French toast have fetched big bucks at auction.
Because these seemingly worthless items once belonged to a celebrity.
Now a study finds that the price depends on the how much contact the celeb had with an item and whether they were heroes or villains.
The research is in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Data from auctions revealed that people spend more on items like jewelry rather than furniture, at least for well-liked folks such as JFK or Jackie O.
Items from reviled celebs such as Bernie Madoff fetched lower bids.
The findings suggest that people's desire for celebrity memorabilia stems from the belief in what's called contagion:
the idea that a person's essence can be transferred through an object they touched.
A follow-up experiment further supports the contagion idea.
Participants said they would pay substantially less for a celebrity darling's sweater if it had been sterilized.
But sterilization actually increased the amount subjects would pay for a sweater owned by a disliked celebrity.
Gives a whole new meaning to money laundering.
Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Allie Wilkinson.
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