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Minggu, 06 Maret 2011

Blink : The Power of Thinking Without Thinking

Blink : The Power of Thinking Without Thinking - Some years ago, a young couple came to the University of Washington to visit the laboratory of a psychologist  named  John Gottman. They were  in  their  twenties,  blond  and  blue-eyed with  stylishly  tousled  haircuts  and funky glasses. Later, some of the people who worked in the lab would say they were  the kind of couple that is easy to like—intelligent and attractive and  funny in a droll, ironic kind of way—and that much is  immediately obvious from the videotape Gottman made of their visit. The husband, whom I’ll call Bill, had an endearingly playful manner. His wife, Susan, had a sharp, deadpan wit. 

They were  led  into  a  small  room  on  the  second  floor  of  the  nondescript  two-story  building  that  housed Gottman’s operations, and they sat down about five feet apart on two office chairs mounted on raised platforms. They both had electrodes and sensors clipped  to  their  fingers and ears, which measured  things  like  their heart rate, how much they were sweating, and the temperature of their skin. Under their chairs, a “jiggle-o-meter” on the platform measured how much each of  them moved around. Two video cameras, one aimed at each person, recorded everything they said and did. For  fifteen minutes,  they were  left alone with the cameras rolling, with instructions to discuss any topic from their marriage that had become a point of contention. For Bill and Sue it was their dog. They  lived in a small apartment and had just gotten a very large puppy. Bill didn’t like the dog; Sue did. For fifteen minutes, they discussed what they ought to do about it. 

The videotape of Bill and Sue’s discussion seems, at least at first, to be a random sample of a very ordinary kind of conversation that couples have all the time. No one gets angry. There are no scenes, no breakdowns, no epiphanies. “I’m just not a dog person” is how Bill starts things off, in a perfectly reasonable tone of voice. He complains a little bit—but about the dog, not about Susan. She complains, too, but there are also moments when they simply forget that they are supposed to be arguing. When the subject of whether the dog smells comes up, for example, Bill and Sue banter back and forth happily, both with a half smile on their lips.

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