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Jul 16, 2021
This week’s themeWords coined after buildings and venues This week’s words tammany Grand Guignol chamber of horrors bastille Hawthorne effect
Hawthorne Works, ca. 1907
Photo: Western Electric / Wikimedia This week’s comments AWADmail 994 Next week's theme Words that aren't what they seem A.Word.A.Day
with Anu GargHawthorne effect
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
noun: An improvement in workers’ performance attributed to the special attention they received when singled out for a study.
ETYMOLOGY:
After Hawthorne Works, a factory complex of the Western Electric Company,
where this effect was observed. The complex was named after the original
name of the town where it was located. Earliest documented use: 1958.
NOTES:
In the 1920s, researchers studying a group of workers at the
Hawthorne Works of the Western Electric Company in Cicero, Illinois,
observed something peculiar. They found that the productivity increased
irrespective of the change in the direction of a variable. For example,
the performance improved under brighter lights, but also when the
lighting level was reduced. The researchers attributed this phenomenon
to the workers’ perception that they were being given some attention.
The very realization of being singled out for study motivated them
to perform better. A few cousins of the Hawthorne effect are the placebo effect and the Heisenberg uncertainty principle. USAGE:
“AJC: What do you think of the popularity of shows like ‘The Bachelor’
or ‘Fear Factor’? Janeane Garofalo: They’re not reality shows. They’re completely imitation-of-life shows. It’s the Hawthorne effect. You are aware of the camera, so your actions aren’t real.” Rodney Ho; Interview: Garofalo, One Funny Technophobe; The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (Georgia); Nov 22, 2002. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
We denizens of Earth have a common vice: We take what we're offered,
whether we need it or not. You can get into a lot of trouble that way.
-Robert Sheckley, science-fiction author (16 Jul 1928-2005)
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