Why Punishment Only Goes so Far to Satisfy Victims

Why Punishment Only Goes so Far to Satisfy Victims
"We found that punishment was only satisfying if the transgressor changed his attitude as a result of punishment. In addition, only if such a change occurred, participants would agree that everybody got what they deserve," Friederike Funk says. (*Shutterstock)
5/16/2014
Updated:
5/16/2014

Punishment is only satisfying to victims if it causes the offenders to change their attitude, according to a series of experiments that examined a range of situations—from casual encounters to the sentencing of a criminal.

“Revenge is only ‘sweet’ if the person reacts with a change in attitude, if the person understands that what they did was wrong. It is not the act itself that makes punishment satisfying,” says Friederike Funk, a Princeton University graduate student in psychology.

In one of the experiments, participants recruited from among Princeton undergraduates were matched with what they were told was a human partner to solve a series of anagrams. The participants were asked to individually solve as many anagrams as they could in two minutes. For each, they would be paid 10 cents.

The participant’s partner—actually a computer programmed to complete the exercise—always solved one fewer anagram than the participant. But when asked how the pair should split their earnings, the computer partner always wanted to keep the entire payment for itself. The human participants generally recommended roughly an even split. The final averaged payment was therefore always unfair. 

Most participants were then given the chance to punish their partner for their selfish act by reducing the partner’s earnings. The participants who decided to do so then received one of three reactions:

  • No feedback
  • A message from their computer partner reading: “Hey, you reduced my bonus! OK—I was greedy . . . but I don’t see what was wrong with that . . . In situations like this I always try to get as much as I can.”
  • A message from their computer partner reading: “Hey you reduced my bonus! OK—I was greedy . . . and now see what’s wrong with that . . . I shouldn’t be such a jerk in situations like this!

Satisfaction

“We found that punishment was only satisfying if the transgressor changed his attitude as a result of punishment. In addition, only if such a change occurred, participants would agree that everybody got what they deserve,” Funk says. 

“It doesn’t make a difference if you punish and there is no feedback or if you punish and the transgressor clearly recognizes he is punished but doesn’t change. Both are equally as unsatisfying as if people didn’t have the possibility to punish in the first place.”

While the research focused on a minor social transgression—unfairly splitting a nominal sum of money—it has implications for more serious situations.

Call for Change

The research highlights the need for changes in the criminal justice system, because punishment often doesn’t bring about the moral change victims seek in offenders, says Tyler Okimoto, a senior lecturer in management in the business school at the University of Queensland in Australia whose research topics include conflict management and justice restoration.

“Reconciling the discrepancies in what people seek to achieve through punishment and what our sanctioning practices actually achieve is critical to improving the legitimacy of our justice system,” says Okimoto, who wasn’t involved in the research. “This research should raise red flags for legal policymakers. These findings suggest our sanctioning practices might be adapted to better suit the concerns of the public.”

The findings were published recently in the journal Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin

Source: Princeton University. Republished from Futura.org under Creative Common License 3.0.

*Image of “hands behind bars“ via Shutterstock

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