Abstract

Why do people in big cities behave differently to those living in small cities? To answer this question, in this paper a new concept of urban dynamics is presented that links city size to human behaviour. The concept has its origins in regulatory focus theory. According to the theory, goal-directed behaviour is regulated by two motivational systems, promotion and prevention. Individuals motivated by promotion goals (growth, accomplishment) focus on winning and tend to take risks, whereas those driven by prevention goals (safety, security) focus on not losing and try to avoid risk. Here we elaborate on the existing literature by linking the theory to the urban context. In our conceptualization, cities are powerful regulatory systems, and as such they impinge upon the way people regulate themselves in the urban space. Evidence from signal detection analysis is provided that supports this concept. The experience of a big-city context intensified both promotion-focused behaviour (a risky bias) for promotion-focused participants and prevention-focused behaviour (a conservative bias) for prevention-focused participants. The experience of a small-city context encouraged the opposite behavioural pattern in both cases. These findings suggest that the urban environment can influence the regulatory focus strategies of an individual in a way that cannot simply be explained by their personal regulatory focus. Specifically, the likelihood of one's behaving in a promotion- or prevention-oriented manner is dependent both on one's chronic regulatory focus and also on the urban context in which one lives. Based on this, we maintain that vibrant cities with a large population and a fast pace of life encourage extreme and polarized behaviours, whereas cities with a smaller population and a slower pace of life encourage more moderate and less polarized behavioural responses, which may explain why people in big cities take more risks, do more business, produce and spend more, and even walk faster.

Highlights

  • People living in large cities behave differently to those living in small cities [1]

  • The statistical design consisted of three independent variables, chronic promotion focus and chronic prevention focus and urban context

  • A positive two-way interaction emerged between urban context and chronic promotion focus

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Summary

Introduction

People living in large cities behave differently to those living in small cities [1]. A key finding is that various urban properties, many of which are related to human behaviour, are power-law functions of population size [2,3,4]. These specific power-law functions have been shown to have scaling exponents (β) that fall into three distinct universality classes. All scale superlinearly with population size across nations and over time This superlinear regime essentially implies that the pace of urban life increases with city size. A new concept of urban dynamics is presented that links city size to human motivation and behaviour. We outline a theoretical framework to account for how cities affect people, and how in turn people affect the city

Regulatory focus theory
Regulatory focus theory and the city
Participants
Participants and procedure
Regulatory focus assessment
Signal detection task
Task and manipulation
In which city is the pace of life slower and more relaxed?
Results
Discussion
Conceptual framework
How often did you obey rules and regulations that were
Full Text
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