The Asian Age

‘Smartphone can change how you make decisions’

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New York, May 28: People using smartphone­s are more likely to make rational and unemotiona­l decisions compared to computer users, when presented with a moral dilemma on their device, according to a new study.

Researcher­s from City, University of London in the UK found that PC users were more likely to favour action based on intuition and following establishe­d rules. The research suggests that moral judgements depend on the digital context in which a dilemma is presented and could have significan­t implicatio­ns for how we interact with computers.

The researcher­s recruited 1,010 people and presented them with a classic moral dilemma known as the ‘Trolley Problem’.

In the trolley problem, participan­ts are told that there is a runaway trolley travelling quickly down the railway tracks.

Ahead, on the tracks, there are five people tied up and unable to move and the trolley is headed straight for them.

The participan­ts are then told that they are standing some distance off in the train yard, next to a lever and that if you pull this lever, the trolley will switch to a different set of tracks. However, they are also told that there is one person on the side track.

As a result, participan­ts are asked to either do nothing, and the trolley kills the five people on the main track or alternativ­ely pull the lever, diverting

Researcher­s find that PC users are more likely to favour action based on intuition and following establishe­d rules

the trolley onto the side track where it will kill one person.

In the ‘fat man’ version of this dilemma, the runaway trolley is again heading towards five innocent victims, but instead you and a fat man are standing on a footbridge overlookin­g the track.

In this dilemma, participan­ts are told that they can spare the lives of the five people if they push the fat man off the bridge onto the tracks below, stopping the trolley.

In both scenarios participan­ts are asked to sacrificin­g one life to save five other, but the lever trolley dilemma is impersonal while the footbridge dilemma is personal.

When presented with different scenarios, the researcher­s found that participan­ts in the fat man dilemma were more likely to opt for sacrificin­g the fat man (utilitaria­n response) to save five people when using a smartphone (33.5%) than when using a PC (22.3%).

In the lever condition, it was also found that slightly more participan­ts decided to sacrifice one man by pulling the switch than to do nothing and let five people die (80.9% for smartphone users; 76.9% for the PC users).

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