Journal article
Cognition in context: Social inclusion attenuates the psychological boundary between self and other
SV Bentley, KH Greenaway, SA Haslam
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology | ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE | Published : 2017
Abstract
Cognitive research finds that people show superior encoding of information relating to the self rather than to others. This phenomenon, known as the self-reference effect, supports a view of the self as a definable and measurable entity. However, modern perspectives hold that the self is contextually fluid, not least because, under some conditions, ‘other’ can be incorporated into the self as part of ‘us’. This suggests that when perceivers see another person as an ingroup member, the self-reference effect will be attenuated. This hypothesis was tested in two experiments in which participants were included in, or excluded from, a minimal social group. When participants were excluded, the sta..
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Grants
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This research was supported by grants from the Australian Research Council awarded to the second author (DE160100761) and the third author (FLFL110100199). The authors would like to thank Bill von Hippel and Roy Baumeister for helpful comments on earlier versions of this paper.