Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
947804 | Journal of Experimental Social Psychology | 2014 | 13 Pages |
•Visual attention can be guided by memory contents maintained by a co-actor.•The contribution of individualism-collectivism to this effect is examined.•The effect positively correlates with collectivism, but not individualism, scores.•The effect is enhanced by collectivistic, but not individualistic, priming.•Competitiveness, a measure of vertical individualism, does not contribute either.
Recently it has been shown that the allocation of attention by a participant in a visual search task can be affected by memory items that have to be maintained by a co-actor, when similar tasks are jointly engaged by dyads (He, Lever, & Humphreys, 2011). In the present study we examined the contribution of individualism-collectivism to this ‘interpersonal memory guidance’ effect. Actors performed visual search while a preview image was either held by the critical participant, held by a co-actor or was irrelevant to either participant. Attention during search was attracted to stimuli that matched the contents of the co-actor's memory. This interpersonal effect correlated with the collectivism scores, and was enhanced by priming with a collectivistic scenario. The dimensions of individualism, however, did not contribute to performance. These data suggest that collectivism, but not individualism, modulates interpersonal influences on memory and attention in joint action.