Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
948269 Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 2012 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

An experiment demonstrates that cultural practices involving physical synchrony can emotionally bind people together, making those people more likely to comply with others' requests to engage in aggressive behavior. Participants who acted in synchrony with a confederate were more likely than were participants in the asynchronous and control conditions to comply with the confederate's request to administer a noise blast to another group of participants. Increased feelings of emotional connection with the confederate mediated the relationship between synchrony and heightened compliance with the request to engage in aggressive behavior.

► Synchronous activity boosted compliance with requests to aggress ► Enhanced social connection mediated link between synchrony and compliance ► Synchrony did not boost aggression without accompanying request from group member ► Study is first to show that synchrony can lead to aggression

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