| Literature DB >> 23559692 |
Christopher Y Olivola1, Eldar Shafir.
Abstract
Most theories of motivation and behavior (and lay intuitions alike) consider pain and effort to be deterrents. In contrast to this widely held view, we provide evidence that the prospect of enduring pain and exerting effort for a prosocial cause can promote contributions to the cause. Specifically, we show that willingness to contribute to a charitable or collective cause increases when the contribution process is expected to be painful and effortful rather than easy and enjoyable. Across five experiments, we document this "martyrdom effect," show that the observed patterns defy standard economic and psychological accounts, and identify a mediator and moderator of the effect. Experiment 1 showed that people are willing to donate more to charity when they anticipate having to suffer to raise money. Experiment 2 extended these findings to a non-charity laboratory context that involved real money and actual pain. Experiment 3 demonstrated that the martyrdom effect is not the result of an attribute substitution strategy (whereby people use the amount of pain and effort involved in fundraising to determine donation worthiness). Experiment 4 showed that perceptions of meaningfulness partially mediate the martyrdom effect. Finally, Experiment 5 demonstrated that the nature of the prosocial cause moderates the martyrdom effect: the effect is strongest for causes associated with human suffering. We propose that anticipated pain and effort lead people to ascribe greater meaning to their contributions and to the experience of contributing, thereby motivating higher prosocial contributions. We conclude by considering some implications of this puzzling phenomenon.Entities:
Keywords: charity; fundraising; martyrdom effect; prosocial behavior; self-sacrifice
Year: 2011 PMID: 23559692 PMCID: PMC3613749 DOI: 10.1002/bdm.767
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Behav Decis Mak ISSN: 0894-3257
Figure 1Mean donations as a function of fundraising condition in Experiment 1A (bars on the left) and Experiment 1B (bars on the right). The means include nonparticipation responses, coded as $0 donations. Numbers underneath the bars indicate the sample size in each condition. Error bars represent ±1 standard error
Figure 2Mean contributions (among all players) and mean estimated contributions (among those contributing) for each condition in Experiment 2. Numbers underneath the bars indicate the sample size in each condition. Error bars represent ±1 standard error
Figure 3Mean donations as a function of cause and fundraiser type in Experiment 5. The means include nonparticipation responses, coded as $0 donations. Numbers underneath the bars indicate the sample size in each condition. Error bars represent ±1 standard error
Summary of results obtained across experiments when comparing contributions offered in painful–effortful and easy–enjoyable fundraisers
| Effect size | Sample size | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Relative increase in mean contributions (%) | Charity/cause | |||
| Experiment 1a (endurance run vs. picnic) | 72 | 0.70 | 96 | Asian tsunami |
| Experiment 1b (endurance run vs. picnic) | 59 | 0.51 | 96 | Hurricane Katrina |
| Experiment 2 (cold pressor vs. control) | 31 | 0.70 | 36 | Public pool (collective) |
| Experiment 4 (endurance run vs. picnic) | 213 | 0.61 | 357 | Victims of war and genocide |
| Experiment 5 (30-h fast vs. picnic) | 93 | 0.58 | 76 | Starving children in poor countries |
| Average [total] | 94 | 0.62 | [661] |
Note. In all these comparisons, the mean amount contributed was greater in the painful–effortful condition than in the easy–enjoyable one.