How to help more : effects of glucose-rinse and autonomous motivation on prosocial behaviour

Glucose-rinsing and prosocial behaviours have been separately studied in past research, and this study aims to join these two fields of work together. Specifically, the effects of glucose-rinsing and motivation on actual prosocial behaviour will be examined in the present study. Seventy-nine undergr...

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Main Author: Lim, Samantha Jing Xian
Other Authors: Joyce Pang Shu Min
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2014
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/56094
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-560942019-12-10T14:07:13Z How to help more : effects of glucose-rinse and autonomous motivation on prosocial behaviour Lim, Samantha Jing Xian Joyce Pang Shu Min School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology Glucose-rinsing and prosocial behaviours have been separately studied in past research, and this study aims to join these two fields of work together. Specifically, the effects of glucose-rinsing and motivation on actual prosocial behaviour will be examined in the present study. Seventy-nine undergraduates between ages 19 to 24 years were administered with either a glucose solution or placebo solution prior to an unexpected helping episode, during which a confederate requested for help in a title generation task. On behalf of the confederate, the experimenter solicited help from each participant. The requests for help were phrased differently to place participants in either an autonomous motivation or controlled motivation condition. Results showed no significant effect for rinsing and motivation to help. However, there was a marginally significant interaction effect between rinsing and prosocial motivation on helping behaviour. The findings suggest that glucose-rinsing acts as a moderator between prosocial motivation and prosocial behaviour. Participants with autonomous prosocial motivation had the highest helping performance when they rinsed with glucose solution. Interestingly, findings also revealed that controlled prosocial motivation eliminated the positive effects of glucose rinsing as individuals would offer help regardless of the solution being rinsed. Consequently, the use of glucose-rinsing would be beneficial in the helping domain, particularly for individuals who already have autonomous prosocial motivation. Bachelor of Arts 2014-04-03T06:21:53Z 2014-04-03T06:21:53Z 2014 2014 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/56094 en Nanyang Technological University 39 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
Lim, Samantha Jing Xian
How to help more : effects of glucose-rinse and autonomous motivation on prosocial behaviour
description Glucose-rinsing and prosocial behaviours have been separately studied in past research, and this study aims to join these two fields of work together. Specifically, the effects of glucose-rinsing and motivation on actual prosocial behaviour will be examined in the present study. Seventy-nine undergraduates between ages 19 to 24 years were administered with either a glucose solution or placebo solution prior to an unexpected helping episode, during which a confederate requested for help in a title generation task. On behalf of the confederate, the experimenter solicited help from each participant. The requests for help were phrased differently to place participants in either an autonomous motivation or controlled motivation condition. Results showed no significant effect for rinsing and motivation to help. However, there was a marginally significant interaction effect between rinsing and prosocial motivation on helping behaviour. The findings suggest that glucose-rinsing acts as a moderator between prosocial motivation and prosocial behaviour. Participants with autonomous prosocial motivation had the highest helping performance when they rinsed with glucose solution. Interestingly, findings also revealed that controlled prosocial motivation eliminated the positive effects of glucose rinsing as individuals would offer help regardless of the solution being rinsed. Consequently, the use of glucose-rinsing would be beneficial in the helping domain, particularly for individuals who already have autonomous prosocial motivation.
author2 Joyce Pang Shu Min
author_facet Joyce Pang Shu Min
Lim, Samantha Jing Xian
format Final Year Project
author Lim, Samantha Jing Xian
author_sort Lim, Samantha Jing Xian
title How to help more : effects of glucose-rinse and autonomous motivation on prosocial behaviour
title_short How to help more : effects of glucose-rinse and autonomous motivation on prosocial behaviour
title_full How to help more : effects of glucose-rinse and autonomous motivation on prosocial behaviour
title_fullStr How to help more : effects of glucose-rinse and autonomous motivation on prosocial behaviour
title_full_unstemmed How to help more : effects of glucose-rinse and autonomous motivation on prosocial behaviour
title_sort how to help more : effects of glucose-rinse and autonomous motivation on prosocial behaviour
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/56094
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