Why We Stand Where We Do In An Elevator
Elevator riders tend to
arrange themselves into mini social hierarchies.
This Survey conducted an ethnographic
study of elevator behavior in two of the tallest office buildings in Adelaide,
Australia. After taking a total of 30 elevator rides in the two buildings,
researcher discovered there was an established order to where people tended
stand.
"More senior men in particular seemed
to direct themselves towards the back of the elevator cabins, “The Editor
writes in a blog for Ethnography Matters. "In front of them were younger
men, and in front of them were women of all ages."
There was also a difference in where
people directed their gaze mid-ride: "Men watched the monitors, looked in
the side mirrors (in one building) to see themselves, and in the door mirrors
(of the other building) to also watch others. Women would watch the monitors
and avoid eye contact with other users (unless in conversation) and the mirrors."
In other words, men would check everyone else (and themselves) out
during their elevator ride. Women, on the other hand, would only look in the
mirrors when they were with other women.
Research wasn't sure what to make of these results. Was the back of
the elevator a position of power? Survey person told people that analyzing the
results as part of a power hierarchy seemed "almost too cliche." It
could be that people who are more shy stand toward the front, where they can't
see other passengers, whereas bolder people stand in the back, where they have
a view of everyone else. Survey says the topic begs further analysis.
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