Department of Experimental Psychology, Ghent University, Belgium.
Social Cognition Center Cologne, University of Cologne, Germany.
Cognition. 2018 Jan;170:179-189. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2017.09.019.
According to social reward theories, automatic imitation can be understood as a means to obtain positive social consequences. In line with this view, it has been shown that automatic imitation is modulated by contextual variables that constrain the positive outcomes of imitation. However, this work has largely neglected that many gestures have an inherent pro- or antisocial meaning. As a result of their meaning, antisocial gestures are considered taboo and should not be used in public. In three experiments, we show that automatic imitation of symbolic gestures is modulated by the social intent of these gestures. Experiment 1 (N=37) revealed reduced automatic imitation of antisocial compared with prosocial gestures. Experiment 2 (N=118) and Experiment 3 (N=118) used a social priming procedure to show that this effect was stronger in a prosocial context than in an antisocial context. These findings were supported in a within-study meta-analysis using both frequentist and Bayesian statistics. Together, our results indicate that automatic imitation is regulated by internalized social norms that act as a stop signal when inappropriate actions are triggered.
根据社会奖励理论,自动模仿可以被理解为获得积极社会后果的一种手段。与这一观点一致,已经表明自动模仿受到限制模仿积极结果的上下文变量的调节。然而,这项工作在很大程度上忽略了许多手势具有内在的亲社会或反社会意义。由于它们的意义,反社会的手势被认为是禁忌的,不应该在公共场合使用。在三个实验中,我们表明,对符号手势的自动模仿受到这些手势的社会意图的调节。实验 1(N=37)显示,与亲社会手势相比,反社会手势的自动模仿减少了。实验 2(N=118)和实验 3(N=118)使用社会启动程序表明,在亲社会情境中,这种影响比在反社会情境中更强。这一发现得到了使用经典和贝叶斯统计的研究内元分析的支持。总之,我们的结果表明,自动模仿受到内化的社会规范的调节,当触发不适当的行为时,这些规范就像一个停止信号。