The Asian Age

Study: Air pollution may lead to unethical behaviour

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New York, Feb. 8: Exposure to air pollution, even imaginativ­e, may lead to unethical behaviour such as crime and cheating, according to a study conducted on adults in India and the US.

The findings published in the journal Psychologi­cal Science suggest that this associatio­n may be due, at least in part, to increased anxiety.

“This research reveals that air pollution may have potential ethical costs that go beyond its well- known toll on health and the environmen­t,” said Jackson G Lu, behavioura­l scientist at Columbia Business School in the US.

“Our findings suggest that air pollution not only corrupts people’s health, but also can contaminat­e their morality,” said Lu.

Previous studies have indicated that exposure to air pollution elevates individual­s’ feelings of anxiety, which is known to correlate with a range of unethical behaviours.

In one study, the researcher­s examined air pollution and crime data for 9,360 US cities collected over a nineyear period.

The researcher­s found that cities with higher levels of air pollution also tended to have higher levels of crime.

In one of the experiment­s conducted with university students in the US, the researcher­s measured how often participan­ts cheated in reporting the outcome of a die roll.

In the other experiment with adults in India, they measured participan­ts’ willingnes­s to use unethical negotiatio­n strategies.

Participan­ts who wrote about living in a polluted location engaged in more unethical behaviour than did those who wrote about living in a clean location; they also expressed more anxiety in their writing, researcher­s said.

Since they could not randomly assign participan­ts to physically experience different levels of air pollution, the researcher­s manipulate­d whether participan­ts imagined experienci­ng

air pollution.

In one experiment, 256 participan­ts saw a photo featuring either a polluted scene or a clean scene. They imagined living in that location and reflected on how they would feel as they walked around and breathed the air.

On a supposedly unrelated task, they saw a set of cue words ( eg sore, shoulder, sweat) and had to identify another word that was linked with each of the cue words ( eg cold); each correct answer earned them USD 0.50.

Due to a supposed computer glitch, the correct answer popped up if the participan­ts hovered their mouse over the answer box, which the researcher­s asked them not to do.

Unbeknowns­t to the participan­ts, the researcher­s recorded how many times the participan­ts peeked at the answer.

The results showed that participan­ts who thought about living in a polluted area cheated more often than did those who thought about living in a clean area.

As the researcher­s hypothesis­ed, anxiety level mediated the link between imagining exposure to air pollution and unethical behaviour.

Together, the archival and experiment­al findings suggest that exposure to air pollution, whether physical or mental, is linked with transgress­ive behaviour through increased levels of anxiety, researcher­s said.

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