Group dance, social cohesion, and social identity in the Yali society from Papua

IF 2.2 3区 心理学 0 MUSIC
Piotr Sorokowski, Jerzy Luty, Wojciech Malecki, Marta Kowal
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Group dance to music is a ubiquitous activity performed all around the world. Considering that even our distant ancestors engaged in ritual dancing, joint dances seem to be deeply rooted in human nature. Thus many scholars have hypothesized that group dancing might serve important adaptive roles. Here, we tested this premise by exploring whether group dancing to music does indeed entail social benefits, which could explain the pervasive nature of group dancing. We conducted a non-laboratory experiment among members of the Yali, an indigenous people living in Highland Papua, an Indonesian province. In total, 180 Yali participated in the study (80 in the dance condition and 100 in the control condition), among whom 93 (52%) were women (age M = 30.36, SD = 10.36). The results showed that joint dancing led to greater prosociality, demonstrated by the sharing of a larger sum of money in the Dictator Game, and stronger social identity, shown by a higher level of in-group favoritism. So far as we know, our study is the first to provide ecologically valid and naturalistic evidence, from an experiment in which members of a traditional society participated, that supports the adaptive role of group dancing. We conclude by discussing the potential beneficial effects of group dance, including greater prosociality and a higher level of in-group favoritism.
巴布亚耶利社会的群舞、社会凝聚力和社会认同
随着音乐跳舞是世界各地普遍存在的活动。考虑到即使是我们遥远的祖先也从事仪式舞蹈,联合舞蹈似乎深深植根于人性。因此,许多学者假设群舞可能具有重要的适应性作用。在这里,我们通过探索集体舞蹈是否真的带来社会效益来验证这个前提,这可以解释集体舞蹈的普遍性质。我们在居住在印度尼西亚巴布亚高地的土著亚利族成员中进行了一项非实验室实验。共有180名雅丽人参与研究,其中舞蹈组80人,对照组100人,其中女性93人(52%),年龄M = 30.36, SD = 10.36。结果表明,在独裁者游戏中分享更多的钱,共同跳舞会导致更强的亲社会性,以及更强的社会认同,表现为更高程度的群体内偏袒。据我们所知,我们的研究是第一个提供生态上有效的和自然的证据,从一个传统社会成员参与的实验中,支持群舞的适应性作用。最后,我们讨论了群舞的潜在有益影响,包括更大的亲社会性和更高水平的群体内偏袒。
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来源期刊
Musicae Scientiae
Musicae Scientiae Multiple-
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
8.30%
发文量
21
期刊介绍: MUSICAE SCIENTIAE is the trilingual journal, official organ of ESCOM, published with the financial support of the Belgian Science Policy.
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