The Joint Action Effect on Memory as a Social Phenomenon: The Role of Cued Attention and Psychological Distance

In contrast to individual tasks, a specific social setting is created when two partners work together on a task. How does such a social setting affect memory for taskrelated information? We addressed this issue in a distributed joint-action paradigm, where two team partners respond to different type...

Verfasser: Wagner, Ullrich
Giesen, Anna
Knausenberger, Judith
Echterhoff, Gerald
FB/Einrichtung:FB 07: Psychologie und Sportwissenschaft
Dokumenttypen:Artikel
Medientypen:Text
Erscheinungsdatum:2017
Publikation in MIAMI:04.01.2019
Datum der letzten Änderung:16.04.2019
Angaben zur Ausgabe:[Electronic ed.]
Quelle:Frontiers in Psychology 8 (2017) 1697, 1-10
Schlagwörter:joint action; social memory; incidental encoding; psychological distance
Fachgebiet (DDC):150: Psychologie
Lizenz:CC BY 4.0
Sprache:English
Förderung:Finanziert durch den Open-Access-Publikationsfonds 2017 der Westfälischen Wilhelms-Universität Münster (WWU Münster).
Format:PDF-Dokument
URN:urn:nbn:de:hbz:6-06139616875
Weitere Identifikatoren:DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01697
Permalink:https://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:hbz:6-06139616875
Onlinezugriff:artikel_wagner_2017.pdf

In contrast to individual tasks, a specific social setting is created when two partners work together on a task. How does such a social setting affect memory for taskrelated information? We addressed this issue in a distributed joint-action paradigm, where two team partners respond to different types of information within the same task. Previous work has shown that joint action in such a task enhances memory for items that are relevant to the partner’s task but not to the own task. By removing critical, non-social confounds, we wanted to pinpoint the social nature of this selective memory advantage. Specifically, we created joint task conditions in which participants were aware of the shared nature of the concurrent task but could not perceive sensory cues to the other’s responses. For a differentiated analysis of the social parameters, we also varied the distance between partners. We found that the joint action effect emerged even without sensory cues from the partner, and it declined with increasing distance between partners. These results support the notion that the joint-action effect on memory is in its core driven by the experience of social co-presence, and does not simply emerge as a by-product of partner-generated sensory cues.