Columbus Simon, Molho Catherine, Righetti Francesca, Balliet Daniel
Department of Experimental and Applied Psychology.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2021 Mar;120(3):626-650. doi: 10.1037/pspi0000253. Epub 2020 Jun 25.
Philosophers and scientists have long debated the nature of human social interactions and the prevalence of mutual dependence, conflict of interests, and power asymmetry in social situations. Yet, there is surprisingly little empirical work documenting the patterns of interdependence that people experience in daily life. We use experience sampling to study how people think about 3 dimensions of interdependence in daily life and how these dimensions relate to cooperation. In Study 1, 139 romantic couples ( = 278) reported on situations experienced with their partner ( = 6,766); in Study 2, individuals ( = 284) reported on situations experienced with any other person ( = 7,248), over the course of 1 week. Across both samples, we found that most social interactions were perceived as containing moderate mutual dependence, equal power, and corresponding interests. When couples reported on the same situation (Study 1), they largely agreed on their experienced interdependence and cooperation, suggesting that their reports reflect an underlying shared reality. In daily interactions across both samples, higher mutual dependence and lower conflict of interests were associated with more cooperation, whereas relative power was not directly related to cooperation. These associations replicated in laboratory experiments (Study 2). In daily life, high mutual dependence and high relative power exacerbated the negative relation between conflict of interests and cooperation. Finally, prevalent patterns of interdependence and the experience of specific interdependent situations affected multiple relationship outcomes. Our findings stress the importance of studying a diverse array of interdependent situations-and especially situations with corresponding interests-to better understand cooperation in daily life. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
长期以来,哲学家和科学家一直在争论人类社会互动的本质,以及社会情境中相互依赖、利益冲突和权力不对称的普遍程度。然而,令人惊讶的是,几乎没有实证研究记录人们在日常生活中所经历的相互依赖模式。我们使用经验抽样法来研究人们如何思考日常生活中相互依赖的三个维度,以及这些维度与合作的关系。在研究1中,139对浪漫情侣(N = 278)报告了他们与伴侣共同经历的情境(N = 6766);在研究2中,个体(N = 284)报告了他们在一周内与其他任何人共同经历的情境(N = 7248)。在两个样本中,我们发现大多数社会互动被认为包含适度的相互依赖、平等的权力和相应的利益。当情侣报告相同的情境时(研究1),他们在经历的相互依赖和合作方面基本达成一致,这表明他们的报告反映了潜在的共同现实。在两个样本的日常互动中,更高的相互依赖和更低的利益冲突与更多的合作相关,而相对权力与合作没有直接关系。这些关联在实验室实验中得到了重复验证(研究2)。在日常生活中,高度的相互依赖和高相对权力加剧了利益冲突与合作之间 的负面关系。最后,普遍的相互依赖模式和特定相互依赖情境的体验影响了多种关系结果。我们的研究结果强调了研究各种相互依赖情境——尤其是具有相应利益的情境——对于更好地理解日常生活中的合作的重要性。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2021美国心理学会,保留所有权利)