Group membership does not modulate automatic imitation.

Psychological Research Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Epub Date: 2021-06-09 DOI:10.1007/s00426-021-01526-1
Oliver Genschow, Mareike Westfal, Emiel Cracco, Jan Crusius
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

Individuals have the automatic tendency to imitate each other. A key prediction of different theories explaining automatic imitation is that individuals imitate in-group members more strongly than out-group members. However, the empirical basis for this prediction is rather inconclusive. Only a few experiments have investigated the influence of group membership using classic automatic imitation paradigms and these experiments led to mixed results. To put the group membership prediction to a critical test, we carried out six high-powered experiments (total N = 1538) in which we assessed imitation with the imitation-inhibition task and manipulated group membership in different ways. Evidence across all experiments indicates that group membership does not modulate automatic imitation. Moreover, we do not find support for the idea that feelings of affiliation or perceived similarity moderate the effect of group membership on automatic imitation. These results have important implications for theories explaining automatic imitation and contribute to the current discussion of whether automatic imitation can be socially modulated.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

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群体成员并不会调节自动模仿。
个体有一种自动的相互模仿的倾向。解释自动模仿的不同理论的一个关键预测是,个体对群体内成员的模仿比对群体外成员的模仿更强烈。然而,这种预测的经验基础是相当不确定的。只有少数实验利用经典的自动模仿范式研究了群体成员的影响,这些实验的结果好坏参半。为了对群体成员预测进行关键检验,我们进行了6个高功率实验(总N = 1538),在这些实验中,我们通过模仿-抑制任务评估模仿,并以不同的方式操纵群体成员。所有实验的证据都表明,群体成员并不会调节自动模仿。此外,我们没有发现支持归属感或感知相似性调节群体成员对自动模仿的影响的观点。这些结果对解释自动模仿的理论具有重要意义,并有助于当前关于自动模仿是否可以社会调节的讨论。
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