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Misattribution of Arousal
Dutton & Aron (1974): The Capilano Suspension Bridge Experiment
When your heart races and palms sweat, your brain must interpret these sensations.
But what if it gets the source wrong? Dutton and Aron discovered that fear-induced
physiological arousal can be misattributed to romantic attraction.
Standing 230 feet above a rocky canyon, knees shaking, you meet
an attractive stranger. Is that butterflies in your stomach from fearβor from love?
Choose Your Bridge
You're about to cross a bridge in British Columbia. Which one?
π
Capilano Suspension Bridge
450 feet long, 5 feet wide, swaying 230 feet above jagged rocks and roaring water.
It creaks, sways, and tilts with every step.
Fear level: Extreme
π³
Solid Cedar Bridge
Sturdy wooden bridge, 10 feet above a calm stream. Wide, solid, with high
handrails. A peaceful nature walk.
Fear level: None
You step onto the narrow wooden planks. The bridge lurches under your
weight. Wind gusts rock you from side to side. You grip the fraying rope railings.
Don't look down... but you do. The rocks are 230 feet below. Your heart pounds.
Your hands are sweating. You make it to the other side, breathing hard.
Physiological Arousal
Measuring...
π Racing heart
π¦ Sweaty palms
π° Shortness of breath
𫨠Trembling
ποΈ Dilated pupils
π©βπ¬
An attractive research assistant approaches you:
"Hi! I'm conducting a psychology study. Could you fill out this brief survey?
Here's my phone number in case you have any questions later."
How attracted do you feel to this researcher?
Not at all
Extremely
You stroll across the sturdy wooden bridge. It's solid and wide, with
high handrails. A gentle stream babbles below. Birds chirp in the trees.
The sun filters through the leaves. You feel calm and relaxed.
Physiological Arousal
Measuring...
π Calm heartbeat
π Relaxed breathing
πΏ At ease
π©βπ¬
An attractive research assistant approaches you:
"Hi! I'm conducting a psychology study. Could you fill out this brief survey?
Here's my phone number in case you have any questions later."
How attracted do you feel to this researcher?
Not at all
Extremely
The Paradoxical Results
39%
Scary Bridge
(High arousal)
9%
Safe Bridge
(Low arousal)
% of men who called the female experimenter later
π§ The Misattribution Mechanism
β
π
AROUSAL
Racing heart, sweating
+
π©
ATTRACTIVE PERSON
Nearby stimulus
β
β€οΈ
ATTRACTION
Misattributed label
Schachter-Singer's Two-Factor Theory:
Emotions require (1) physiological arousal AND (2) a cognitive label.
When the true cause is ambiguous, we look to the environment for cluesβand
sometimes get it wrong!
Real-World Implications
Understanding arousal transfer helps explain many phenomena:
π’
Theme Park Dates
Roller coasters β racing hearts β "I really like this person!"
π¬
Horror Movie Dates
Fear arousal gets misattributed to your date, not the movie
β
Coffee Shop Crush
Caffeine-induced arousal can boost perceived attraction
ποΈ
Gym Crushes
Exercise arousal transfers to nearby attractive people
πΌ
Job Interviews
Anxiety arousal might boost how "dynamic" a candidate seems
πΈ
Concert Romance
Music-induced excitement transfers to fellow fans
Original Study: Dutton, D. G., & Aron, A. P. (1974). Some evidence for heightened
sexual attraction under conditions of high anxiety. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology,
30(4), 510β517.
Theoretical Foundation: Schachter, S., & Singer, J. (1962). Cognitive, social,
and physiological determinants of emotional state. Psychological Review, 69(5), 379β399.