Greenaway Katharine H, Wright Ruth G, Willingham Joanne, Reynolds Katherine J, Haslam S Alexander
The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia
Australian National University, Canberra.
Pers Soc Psychol Bull. 2015 Feb;41(2):171-82. doi: 10.1177/0146167214559709. Epub 2014 Nov 21.
The ability to communicate with others is one of the most important human social functions, yet communication is not always investigated from a social perspective. This research examined the role that shared social identity plays in communication effectiveness using a minimal group paradigm. In two experiments, participants constructed a model using instructions that were said to be created by an ingroup or an outgroup member. Participants made models of objectively better quality when working from communications ostensibly created by an ingroup member (Experiments 1 and 2). However, this effect was attenuated when participants were made aware of a shared superordinate identity that included both the ingroup and the outgroup (Experiment 2). These findings point to the importance of shared social identity for effective communication and provide novel insights into the social psychology of communication.
与他人交流的能力是人类最重要的社会功能之一,但交流并非总是从社会角度进行研究。本研究使用最小群体范式考察了共享社会身份在交流有效性中所起的作用。在两项实验中,参与者根据据说是由内群体或外群体成员创建的指令构建模型。当根据表面上由内群体成员创建的交流内容进行工作时,参与者构建的模型在客观上质量更高(实验1和实验2)。然而,当参与者意识到包含内群体和外群体的共享上级身份时,这种效应就会减弱(实验2)。这些发现指出了共享社会身份对有效交流的重要性,并为交流的社会心理学提供了新的见解。