Interviews

High-crime paranoia

by Mark Rowe

Spending as little as 45 minutes in a high-crime, deprived neighbourhood can have measurable effects on people’s trust in others and their feelings of paranoia, it is claimed. A Newcastle University study has found that volunteers who visited high crime neighbourhoods quickly developed a level of trust and paranoia comparable to the residents of that neighbourhood, and significantly different from that in more low-crime neighbourhoods. As a result, researchers urge urban planners to consider the psychological effects of the environment. For the full academic article visit https://peerj.com/articles/236/

It was already known that living in a deprived area is associated with poorer mental health and a less trusting outlook, say the researchers. However, the previous correlational studies had not been able to establish causality: do people become less trusting as a response to the deprivation that surrounds them, or do people who were less trusting to start with tend to reside in more deprived areas? It was to try to address this question that the researchers came up with their random experiment “bussing” volunteers into two contrasting neighbourhoods.

Since the volunteers were assigned to the neighbourhood at random, any differences in their attitudes after the visit would reflect the psychological effects of the experiences they had just had. The lead researcher at Newcastle was Professor Daniel Nettle of the Institute of Neuroscience.

He said: “We weren’t surprised that the residents of our high-crime neighbourhood were relatively low in trust and high in paranoia. That makes sense. What did surprise us though was that a very short visit to the neighbourhood appeared to have much the same effects on trust and paranoia as long-term residence there.”

The results suggest that people respond in real time to the sights and sounds of a neighbourhood – for example, broken windows, graffiti and litter – and that they use these cues to update their attitudes concerning how other people will behave.

Professor Nettle said: “It’s a striking illustration of the extent to which our attitudes and our feelings are malleable and are powerfully influenced by the social environment that surrounds us on a day-to-day basis. Policy-makers, urban planners, and citizens need to remember this. Improving the quality and security of the urban environment is not just a cosmetic luxury; it could have profound knock-on effects for city-dwellers’ social relationships and mental health.”

Researchers at Newcastle University studied two neighbourhoods of the same, unnamed city only a few kilometres apart, one economically deprived and relatively high in crime, and the other affluent and relatively low in crime. They initially surveyed the residents and found that the residents of the high-crime neighbourhood reported lower feelings of social trust and higher feelings of paranoia than the residents of the other neighbourhood.

In an effort to understand how these feelings had come to exist, they enrolled over 50 student volunteers, who were not from either neighbourhood, and bussed them to one or other neighbourhood at random. The volunteers, who did not know the purpose of the study, spent up to 45 minutes walking the streets and delivering envelopes to houses. Afterwards, the volunteers were also surveyed about their feelings of social trust and paranoia.

Those sent to the disorderly neighbourhood reported lower trust and higher paranoia than those sent to the affluent neighbourhood. Moreover, even after such a brief visit, the visitors to a neighbourhood had become indistinguishable from the residents of that neighbourhood in terms of their levels of trust and paranoia.

Nettle D, Pepper GV, Jobling R, Schroeder KB. (2014) Being there: a brief visit to a neighbourhood induces the social attitudes of that neighbourhood. PeerJ 2:e236 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.236

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