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第1段

1 .This is Scientific American 60-Second Mind, I'm Christie Nicholson. Got a minute?

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2 .If something looks like trash you are more likely to trash it.

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3 .Even if it has value, such as recyclable items like aluminum cans or torn paper.

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4 .That's according to a study in the Journal of Consumer Research.

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5 .Volunteers were asked to evaluate a pair of scissors.

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6 .Some were told to cut up sheets of paper.

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7 .The others were instructed to examine the scissors but to leave their sheets of paper alone, uncut and intact.

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8 .All of the participants were asked to discard the paper as they left the room.

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9 .At the exit sat two identical trash bins, one labeled for recycling, the other for trash.

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10 .And the people who shredded the paper were less likely to toss it in the recycling bin than those who were left holding the pristine sheets.

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11 .In another experiment, participants were less likely to recycle aluminum cans that were crumpled than empty cans still in good shape.

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12 .More than two billion tons of trash gets tossed away every year around the globe.

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13 .Figuring out how people think about what they're going to discard should help the effort to squeeze more use out of less stuff.

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14 .Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American 60-Second Mind. I'm Christie Nicholson.

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