Woodley Lucas, DeFilippis Evan, Ravi Shankar, Greene Joshua D
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA.
Organizational Behavior, Harvard Business School, Cambridge, MA, USA.
Nat Hum Behav. 2025 Jun 3. doi: 10.1038/s41562-025-02225-2.
Rising political animosity threatens democracy in the United States and other nations. Previous research indicates that intergroup contact under favourable conditions can reduce animosity. Other research indicates that mutually beneficial cooperation is essential for maintaining complex social structures. Building on these ideas, we asked whether mutually beneficial cooperation can reduce animosity between opposing political party members and whether this is possible in an anonymous online context. We created an online quiz game, Tango (letstango.org), where Republicans and Democrats partner and communicate in real time. Across five experiments (N = 4,493, four preregistered), we find that an hour of gameplay with an outparty partner can reduce negative partisanship, with increased self-reported warmth, more equitable economic allocations and more favourable outparty meta-perceptions persisting for up to four months. Gameplay also improves democracy-related attitudes, with effects persisting for one week. The game receives high enjoyability ratings, which may increase motivation to engage with this intervention.
日益加剧的政治敌意威胁着美国和其他国家的民主。先前的研究表明,在有利条件下的群体间接触可以减少敌意。其他研究表明,互利合作对于维持复杂的社会结构至关重要。基于这些观点,我们探讨了互利合作是否能够减少对立政党成员之间的敌意,以及在匿名的在线环境中这是否可行。我们创建了一个在线问答游戏Tango(letstango.org),共和党人和民主党人在其中结成伙伴并实时交流。在五项实验(N = 4493,四项预先注册)中,我们发现与党外伙伴进行一小时的游戏可以减少负面党派偏见,自我报告的温暖感增加,经济分配更加公平,对党外的更积极元认知持续长达四个月。游戏玩法还改善了与民主相关的态度,效果持续一周。该游戏获得了很高的满意度评分,这可能会增加参与这种干预措施的动力。