车尾进与车头进,中外停车之别和经济的关系---NPR

Parking Behavior May Reflect Economic Drive

Scholars have long tried to understand how culture affects communities. New research argues that the parking behavior of drivers may tell us something about the economic productivity of nations.

Copyright © 2014 NPR. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

DAVID GREENE, HOST:

OK, what you're about to hear might make you think very differently next time you park your car. And maybe that's something you're about to do while you're listening to the radio right now. There is research suggesting that the way we park might have implications for our country's economic productivity. NPR's Social Science correspondent Shankar Vedantam joins us each week on this program to talk about things like this.

Shankar, welcome back.

SHANKAR VEDANTAM, BYLINE: Hi, David.

GREENE: All right, Shankar, so draw this together for me - parking your car and the implications it would have for economic productivity.

VEDANTAM: I'm going to try, David, but in order to do that I need to go back and give you some context into one of the most famous psychology experiments ever conducted; it's called Marshmallow Test. In its simplest form, you bring a kid into a room and you offer her a treat, like a marshmallow. And you tell the kid, if you wait for five minutes without eating this treat, you can then have two marshmallows.

Now, the reason this experiment got famous is that the kids who were able to hold off eating the first marshmallow for five minutes; these kids had better educational outcomes, they had more successful careers years and years down the road.

Now, there have been lots of twists and variations to the Marshmallow Test, but the basic idea is this ability to delay gratification - to do the hard thing first to get the payoff later. This is a fundamentally powerful thing.

GREENE: OK so if we take this to a parking lot - is this saying that if I wait longer and longer, I'll find a better parking space?

VEDANTAM: (Laughter) Not quite, David. I spoke with Shaomin Li, he's a professor of international business at Old Dominion University in Virginia. He was recently in Taiwan and his host drove him to different places - to meetings and restaurants and so forth. And he noticed that every time they parked their cars in a parking lot, they backed in - they reversed into their parking spots - and this told him something very interesting. Here he is.

SHAOMIN LI: When they parked, they took effort - elaborate effort - to wiggle in, reverse - they never park head-in. All of a sudden I said, gee, isn't this delayed gratification?

GREENE: Delayed gratification because if you back in and pay the price at the beginning, you don't have to wiggle your way out when you leave?

VEDANTAM: That's exactly right. Li decided to go from this insight to actually do an empirical study. He analyzed differences in how people park their cars in Brazil, China, India, Russia and the United States. And he found there were big differences in how people parked cars in parking lots. Now, he only looked at cars that were parked up against a barrier in parking lots. He found big differences between the countries. For example, he compared parking behavior in China and the United States. Here he is.

LI: In China, 88 percent of cars are parked reverse. In our country, it's less than 6 percent. 6 percent versus 88 - there's got to be something that we need to explain.

STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:

I'm just amazed here because I'm thinking about Russia, where I was for a little bit. Russians just park their car wherever they can find a space - like, on the sidewalk. They don't even think about backing in or going forward. But that's not important right now. This difference between China and the United States, China - 88 percent back in. The United States - so few people back in. What does that tell us?

VEDANTAM: Well, Li thinks that there's a correlation between parking behavior and economic growth rate. So if you buy the idea that reverse parking is a signal of delayed gratification, countries that seem to practice more of this kind of delayed gratification seem to have higher economic growth rate.

GREENE: OK, but that doesn't say good things about the United States. Aren't there other factors at play, potentially? I mean, Americans - we have bigger cars which could be a factor, I mean, they're harder to park. Maybe we just like - hurrying a lot and getting to where we need to go?

VEDANTAM: Yeah, I think that's right David. I think this is a far from definitive study. It's an interesting and provocative study. Li himself thinks that this actually needs to be expanded into a much larger study. So for example, he looked at a few hundred cars parked in major cities of these very large countries. It's possible that parking behavior is different in smaller cities of these countries. And it's also possible that parking behavior has changed over time.

What I find really interesting about Li's work is it shows the value of being curious about human behavior in everyday life. It suggests that if you're observant about things happening around you, there are insights waiting to be discovered.

GREENE: I can just see some of our listeners just like, stationary right now, thinking about how they're going to park their car after listening to you.

VEDANTAM: (Laughter).

GREENE: Shankar, thanks as always.

VEDANTAM: Thanks, David.

所有跟帖: 

这个傻教授,在中国,要是倒车出位,容易被别人撞,如此而已. -pop3- 给 pop3 发送悄悄话 (477 bytes) () 09/17/2014 postreply 06:35:49

当然,要是倒车进的是两边都是空位的地方,这个就差不多了. -pop3- 给 pop3 发送悄悄话 (316 bytes) () 09/17/2014 postreply 06:56:04

倒着进更容易进窄小的车位 -MoonRiverMe- 给 MoonRiverMe 发送悄悄话 (97 bytes) () 09/17/2014 postreply 07:41:04

那样进去的话怎么出来,走天窗? -其乐无穷- 给 其乐无穷 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 09/17/2014 postreply 07:46:23

至于有那么窄吗? -MoonRiverMe- 给 MoonRiverMe 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 09/17/2014 postreply 09:54:38

不能更同意了:-)...去costco头进多,去T&T尾进多 -搬家了- 给 搬家了 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 09/17/2014 postreply 11:57:58

地方挤就的倒进去,地方宽,头直接就去,其实看习惯和喜欢,我喜欢倒,车热时对车辆伤害少一点 -坚茂- 给 坚茂 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 09/17/2014 postreply 07:51:12

车屁股在里面开行李箱拿东西装东西不方便 -MoonRiverMe- 给 MoonRiverMe 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 09/17/2014 postreply 10:15:17

男人头进的多, 女人屁股进的多 -zharry- 给 zharry 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 09/17/2014 postreply 10:19:34

国内来的朋友说头进比较困来, 跟我理解的刚好相反。看来是习惯问题。 -US_CAR.- 给 US_CAR. 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 09/17/2014 postreply 12:38:00

是这样的,他们认为头进困难。据说。。。 -slow_quick- 给 slow_quick 发送悄悄话 slow_quick 的博客首页 (27 bytes) () 09/17/2014 postreply 18:38:45

那是因为警察要看外面,不是要看里面 -MoonRiverMe- 给 MoonRiverMe 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 09/17/2014 postreply 20:20:04

警察出发的时候要求快,所以要头向外。 -US_CAR.- 给 US_CAR. 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 09/18/2014 postreply 19:05:17

尾进是容易点,就是该进多深难判断 -MoonRiverMe- 给 MoonRiverMe 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 09/17/2014 postreply 20:23:26

请您先登陆,再发跟帖!