Traveling Groups Stick Together: How Collective Directional Movement Influences Social Cohesion

We tested the hypothesis that the social act of moving through space with others—collective directional movement—is associated with greater levels of group cohesion compared to static activities. We asked participants to imagine participating in activities as part of a same-sex group and found that...

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Main Authors: Stuart Wilson, Evangelia Bassiou, Aysel Denli, Lynsey C. Dolan, Matthew Watson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2018-08-01
Series:Evolutionary Psychology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1474704918792134
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spelling doaj-18585c7298f344ddb15f62f3900d77fb2020-11-25T03:34:21ZengSAGE PublishingEvolutionary Psychology1474-70492018-08-011610.1177/1474704918792134Traveling Groups Stick Together: How Collective Directional Movement Influences Social CohesionStuart Wilson0Evangelia Bassiou1Aysel Denli2Lynsey C. Dolan3Matthew Watson4 Division of Psychology and Sociology, Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom Division of Psychology and Sociology, Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom Division of Psychology and Sociology, Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom Division of Psychology and Sociology, Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom Department of Psychology, University of Sunderland, Sunderland, United KingdomWe tested the hypothesis that the social act of moving through space with others—collective directional movement—is associated with greater levels of group cohesion compared to static activities. We asked participants to imagine participating in activities as part of a same-sex group and found that imagining going on a journey is associated with higher levels of expected cohesion compared to imagining attending a meeting (Study 1) or an event (Study 2). Study 3 replicates the main effect using different manipulations and finds that it persists regardless of whether the imagined group were friends or strangers. Two further studies employed real-world tasks and show that the effect is not a consequence of goal ascription (Study 4) or synchrony/exertion (Study 5). We argue that the link between this activity and cohesion is a consequence of its ubiquity in social ecologies and the interdependence and shared common fate of those engaged in it.https://doi.org/10.1177/1474704918792134
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stuart Wilson
Evangelia Bassiou
Aysel Denli
Lynsey C. Dolan
Matthew Watson
spellingShingle Stuart Wilson
Evangelia Bassiou
Aysel Denli
Lynsey C. Dolan
Matthew Watson
Traveling Groups Stick Together: How Collective Directional Movement Influences Social Cohesion
Evolutionary Psychology
author_facet Stuart Wilson
Evangelia Bassiou
Aysel Denli
Lynsey C. Dolan
Matthew Watson
author_sort Stuart Wilson
title Traveling Groups Stick Together: How Collective Directional Movement Influences Social Cohesion
title_short Traveling Groups Stick Together: How Collective Directional Movement Influences Social Cohesion
title_full Traveling Groups Stick Together: How Collective Directional Movement Influences Social Cohesion
title_fullStr Traveling Groups Stick Together: How Collective Directional Movement Influences Social Cohesion
title_full_unstemmed Traveling Groups Stick Together: How Collective Directional Movement Influences Social Cohesion
title_sort traveling groups stick together: how collective directional movement influences social cohesion
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Evolutionary Psychology
issn 1474-7049
publishDate 2018-08-01
description We tested the hypothesis that the social act of moving through space with others—collective directional movement—is associated with greater levels of group cohesion compared to static activities. We asked participants to imagine participating in activities as part of a same-sex group and found that imagining going on a journey is associated with higher levels of expected cohesion compared to imagining attending a meeting (Study 1) or an event (Study 2). Study 3 replicates the main effect using different manipulations and finds that it persists regardless of whether the imagined group were friends or strangers. Two further studies employed real-world tasks and show that the effect is not a consequence of goal ascription (Study 4) or synchrony/exertion (Study 5). We argue that the link between this activity and cohesion is a consequence of its ubiquity in social ecologies and the interdependence and shared common fate of those engaged in it.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1474704918792134
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