School of Arts, Social Sciences and Management
Permanent URI for this communityhttps://eresearch.qmu.ac.uk/handle/20.500.12289/2
Browse
Item Traveling groups stick together: How collective directional movement influences social cohesion(Sage, 2018-08-02) Wilson, Stuart; Bassiou, Evangelia; Denli, Aysel; Dolan, Lynsey C.; Watson, MatthewWe 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.