Department of Sociology, University of Oxford.
School of Psychology, University of Birmingham.
Emotion. 2022 Sep;22(6):1193-1207. doi: 10.1037/emo0000952. Epub 2020 Dec 28.
The relations between self and others are fluid and constantly changing but exert a profound influence on our identity and emotional experiences. Indeed, human emotions are frequently and intensely social, and the people with whom we interact can alter our momentary mood. But does emotional "contagion" extend over prolonged periods of hours to days, and, if so, how does it propagate through interconnected groups? Answering this question is empirically challenging, because mood similarity in connected individuals can arise through multiple mechanisms (social influence, social selection, and shared external causation), making causal inferences hard to draw. We address this challenge using temporally high-resolution, longitudinal data from 2 independent, bounded social networks during periods of high communal activity and low external contact. Adolescent study participants (N = 79) completed daily mood (n = 4,724) and social interaction (n = 1,775) ratings during residential performance tours of classical music lasting 5 to 7 days. Analyses using statistical network models show that in both networks, adolescent musicians became reciprocally more similar in mood to their interaction partners. The observed contagion effect was greater for negative than for positive mood. That is, although one may catch a friend's bad mood, the friend may feel less negative in the process. These results suggest a mechanism for emotional buffering and the cost of social support. We found no evidence for social selection based on mood. Indeed, participants were remarkably tolerant of their peers' mood fluctuations and showed no evidence of altering their patterns of social interaction accordingly. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
自我与他人之间的关系是流动的、不断变化的,但对我们的身份和情感体验有着深远的影响。事实上,人类的情感经常而且强烈地具有社会性,我们与之互动的人可以改变我们当下的情绪。但是,情感“传染”是否会持续数小时到数天,并且,如果是这样,它是如何在相互关联的群体中传播的?回答这个问题在经验上具有挑战性,因为相互关联的个体之间的情绪相似性可能通过多种机制(社会影响、社会选择和共同的外部因果关系)产生,从而难以进行因果推断。我们使用来自两个独立的、有界的社交网络在高社区活动和低外部接触期间的时间分辨率高、纵向数据来解决这个问题。青少年研究参与者(N=79)在为期 5 到 7 天的古典音乐居住表演之旅中完成了每日情绪(n=4724)和社交互动(n=1775)的评估。使用统计网络模型的分析表明,在两个网络中,青少年音乐家彼此之间的情绪变得更加相似。与积极情绪相比,观察到的传染效应在消极情绪中更大。也就是说,虽然一个人可能会受到朋友的坏情绪的影响,但朋友在这个过程中可能不会感到那么消极。这些结果表明了一种情绪缓冲和社会支持成本的机制。我们没有发现基于情绪的社会选择的证据。事实上,参与者对他们同伴的情绪波动非常宽容,并且没有证据表明他们相应地改变了他们的社交互动模式。