It turns out that there are two types of human curiosity



Curiosity affects many things, such as relationships and learning, but it's not easy to study because it's not visible. To unravel the mystery of such curiosity, researchers at the University of Pennsylvania and American University conducted a survey using the online encyclopedia ' Wikipedia, ' which boasts a huge amount of information and views.

Hunters, busybodies and the knowledge network building associated with deprivation curiosity | Nature Human Behavior

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41562-020-00985-7

Studying'Hunters and Busybodies,' Penn and American University Researchers Measure Different Types of Curiosity | Penn Engineering Blog
https://blog.seas.upenn.edu/studying-hunters-and-busybodies-penn-and-american-university-researchers-measure-different-types-of-curiosity/

Research Finds There's More Than One Type of Curiosity. Which Do You Have?
https://www.sciencealert.com/there-s-more-than-one-type-of-curiosity-which-do-you-have

The researchers instructed 149 participants to browse Wikipedia for 15 minutes a day for 21 days, measuring the number of pages they visited and the length of time they spent on each page. As a result of graphing using a mathematical method called ' graph theory ', researchers found that human curiosity can be classified into two types, ' Busybody ' and ' Hunter '. Busybody is a fickle type who pursues more diverse information, and Hunter is an inquisitive type who pursues deep knowledge about one piece of information. According to research team associate professor Daniel Bassett , Wikipedia was used in this study because it gives both introverts and extroverts the opportunity to show their curiosity to their heart's content. That is.



Furthermore, when we analyzed the results of the questionnaire conducted before the experiment, the participants who answered 'I want to fill the knowledge gap' as the reason for seeking knowledge told Hunter, and the participants who answered 'I want novel knowledge' to Busybody. There was a tendency to become more likely. We also found that participants are not always fixed to either Busybody or Hunter, and that Busybody and Hunter may switch during browsing.

According to researchers, what the survey has yielded is not 'quantified curiosity,' but 'how curiosity manifests,' which is useful in terms of education and psychiatry. 'We need more data to find a way to use this information in schools, but the false perception that humans can be divided into curious and non-curious,' said research team David Staley. I hope it will be improved. '



in Science, Posted by log1p_kr