sociology of creepiness robert wonser 1. what creeps us out? psychologists francis mcandrew and sara...

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Sociology of Creepiness Robert Wonser 1

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Page 1: Sociology of Creepiness Robert Wonser 1. What Creeps us out? Psychologists Francis McAndrew and Sara Koehnke wanted to know. Their hypothesis was that

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Sociology of Creepiness

Robert Wonser

Page 2: Sociology of Creepiness Robert Wonser 1. What Creeps us out? Psychologists Francis McAndrew and Sara Koehnke wanted to know. Their hypothesis was that

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What Creeps us out?

• Psychologists Francis McAndrew and Sara Koehnke wanted to know.

• Their hypothesis was that being creeped out was a signal that something might be dangerous.

• Things we know are dangerous scare us — no creepiness there — but if we’re unsure if we’re under threat, that’s when things get creepy.

Page 3: Sociology of Creepiness Robert Wonser 1. What Creeps us out? Psychologists Francis McAndrew and Sara Koehnke wanted to know. Their hypothesis was that

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• They surveyed 1,341 people about what they found creepy and, among their findings, they found that people:

• (1) find it creepy when they can’t predict how someone will behave and

• (2) are less creeped out if they think they understand a person’s intentions.

• Both are consistent with the hypothesis that being unsure about a threat is behind the the feeling of creepiness.

Page 4: Sociology of Creepiness Robert Wonser 1. What Creeps us out? Psychologists Francis McAndrew and Sara Koehnke wanted to know. Their hypothesis was that

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Who is the Creepiest of them all?

• Who is creepier?

• Men?

• Women?

• 95% of their respondents agreed that a creepy person was most likely to be a man.

Page 5: Sociology of Creepiness Robert Wonser 1. What Creeps us out? Psychologists Francis McAndrew and Sara Koehnke wanted to know. Their hypothesis was that

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• Generally, people who didn’t or maybe couldn’t follow social conventions were thought of as creepy: – people who hadn’t washed their hair in a while, – stood closer to other people than was normal,

dressed oddly or in dirty clothes, – or laughed at unpredictable times.

Page 6: Sociology of Creepiness Robert Wonser 1. What Creeps us out? Psychologists Francis McAndrew and Sara Koehnke wanted to know. Their hypothesis was that

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Also Creepy• People who had taboo hobbies or

occupations, ones that spoke to a disregard for being normal, were seen as creepy: taxidermists and funeral directors (both of which handle the dead) and adults who collect dolls or dress up like a clown (both of which blur the lines between adulthood and childhood)

Page 7: Sociology of Creepiness Robert Wonser 1. What Creeps us out? Psychologists Francis McAndrew and Sara Koehnke wanted to know. Their hypothesis was that

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• If people we interact with are willing to break one social rule, or perhaps can’t help themselves, then who’s to say they won’t break a more serious one? = Creepy

• • Most of their respondents also didn’t think

that creepy people knew that they were creepy, suggesting that they don’t know they’re breaking social norms = Even creepier.

Page 8: Sociology of Creepiness Robert Wonser 1. What Creeps us out? Psychologists Francis McAndrew and Sara Koehnke wanted to know. Their hypothesis was that

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McAndrew and Koehnke summarize their results:

• “While they may not be overtly threatening, individuals who display unusual nonverbal behaviors… odd emotional behavior… or highly distinctive physical characteristics are outside of the norm, and by definition unpredictable. This activates our “creepiness detector” and increases our vigilance as we try to discern if there is in fact something to fear or not from the person in question.”

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More Creepiness

Page 10: Sociology of Creepiness Robert Wonser 1. What Creeps us out? Psychologists Francis McAndrew and Sara Koehnke wanted to know. Their hypothesis was that

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