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Flip-Middle-Finger

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The
Bird
This document
contains the bird. The
bird is for you, because
you are not worthy of
anything BUT the bird.
Get Bent.
Taboo Hand Gestures
In this study, rather than swearing verbally, which has previously been
shown to help people to better tolerate the pain of plunging their hand into ice
cold water, now volunteers were asked to make a taboo hand gesture while
their hand was immersed.
The idea behind the study was to see to whether the effect of verbal swearing
would translate to a different modality, by which we mean a different one of
the five senses (see, hear, touch, smell, taste). In this case, it was visual—
using a middle finger gesture—as opposed to our previous studies on verbally
articulated swearing.
There was good reason to suppose this would be the case as previous
research has shown that hand gestures can impact psychology. For
example, clenching the fist can make the person feel more powerful and
confident, while making a hand-over-heart gesture can make the person feel
more honest. Another factor that made us expect to see a see a pain-relieving
effect of “visual swearing” was because making a middle finger gesture would
bring to mind similar kinds of taboo thoughts and ideas as happens for verbal
swearing.
However, after running the study with human volunteers and analysing the
data, no such effect was present. The research found that while participants
recognised the middle finger gesture as taboo, still it showed no beneficial
effect on their ability to tolerate pain. Participants were not able to hold their
hand in ice water for longer while making the middle finger gesture compared
with an index finger gesture. They also did not report perceiving a lesser
amount of pain when making the middle finger gesture compared with the
index finger.
There was one beneficial effect of the taboo gesture over pointing with the
index finger—people rated their experience of ice water submersion more
positively with the middle finger. While this might provide some modicum of
relief in the context of pain, overall, this study concludes that making the taboo
middle finger gesture does not provide pain relief in the same way that verbal
swearing has been shown to.
A strange task
The researchers wondered whether the finger gesture didn’t work the same
way as verbal swearing because of the unfamiliarity and general strangeness
of making a gestural response during pain compared with making a verbal
swearing response, which is very common. However, findings from a recent
study by Keele University Ph.D. student Olly Robertson, suggest otherwise.
Olly ran a version of the swearing and pain/ice water study with native
Japanese speakers. The Japanese language does not incorporate swearing
and so this study had volunteers use the Japanese word “kuso,” defined in the
dictionary as “crude for feces.” Still, a beneficial effect of using this word
during an ice water pain challenge was shown. Demonastrating that this
unfamiliar response to pain for these individuals showed a pain-relieving effect
suggests that familiarity with swearing in response to pain is not necessary for
pain-relief to occur. On this basis, it is unlikely that unfamiliarity with making
the middle finger gesture in response to pain is the reason it did not have a
beneficial effect.
Introduction of a target
The middle finger gesture is understood as an insulting gesture made towards
a target, usually a person, but sometimes an object, for example, making the
gesture to a computer that has frozen. This adds an element not present in
previous studies which used swearing out loud, not directed at any target.
Perhaps the element of social risk one is exposed to in using an insult usually
aimed at a target adds stress which works against any pain-relieving effect.
This remains unknown.
For now, the researchers' conclusion is that words speak louder than actions,
at least when it comes to resisting a painful challenge. While verbal swearing
and making a taboo gesture both involve bringing to mind taboo concepts,
flipping the bird showed no pain-relieving effects in the present study in
contrast to verbal swearing which has been shown to be beneficial in previous
research. Whether, in general, verbal swearing represents a more powerful
expressive medium than making a taboo hand gesture is up for debate.
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