Social Isolation Affects the Mimicry Response in the Use of Smartphones : An Ethological Experiment during the COVID-19 Pandemic.

IF 2.2 2区 社会学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY Human Nature-An Interdisciplinary Biosocial Perspective Pub Date : 2023-03-01 Epub Date: 2023-02-21 DOI:10.1007/s12110-023-09443-5
Veronica Maglieri, Anna Zanoli, Dimitri Giunchi, Elisabetta Palagi
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Abstract

Humans are social animals that rely on different ways to interact with each other. The COVID-19 pandemic strongly changed our communication strategies. Because of the importance of direct contact for our species, we predict that immediately after the forced social isolation, people were more prone to engage in direct rather than in virtual interactions, thus showing a lower mimicry response in the use of smartphones. In a non-longitudinal study, we collected behavioral data under naturalistic contexts and directly compared the data of the mimicry response gathered immediately following the Italian lockdown (May-September 2020) with those gathered one year later (May-October 2021). Contrary to our expectations, the mimicry response in the use of smartphones was higher immediately after the lockdown than a year later. Probably the large use of these devices during the lockdown translated into a greater sensitivity to be affected by others' smartphone manipulation. Indeed, social isolation modified, at least in the short term, the ways we interact with others by making us more prone to engage in "virtual" social interactions. The bright side of the coin unveiled by our findings is that the effect seems to diminish over time. The large behavioral dataset analyzed here (1,608 events; 248 people) also revealed that the mimicry response in the use of smartphones was higher between familiar subjects than between strangers. In this view, mimicry in manipulating smartphones can be considered an example of joint action that fosters behavioral synchrony between individuals that, in the long-term, can translate into the formation of social bonding.

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社会隔离会影响使用智能手机时的模仿反应:COVID-19 大流行期间的伦理实验。
人类是社会性动物,依靠不同的方式相互交流。COVID-19 大流行极大地改变了我们的交流策略。由于直接接触对我们这个物种的重要性,我们预测,在被迫与世隔绝之后,人们更容易参与直接互动而不是虚拟互动,从而在使用智能手机时表现出较低的模仿反应。在一项非纵向研究中,我们收集了自然环境下的行为数据,并将意大利封锁后立即收集的模仿反应数据(2020 年 5 月至 9 月)与一年后收集的数据(2021 年 5 月至 10 月)进行了直接比较。与我们的预期相反,封锁后立即使用智能手机的模仿反应高于一年后。可能是由于在封锁期间大量使用这些设备,导致人们对他人操纵智能手机的行为更加敏感。事实上,社会隔离至少在短期内改变了我们与他人互动的方式,使我们更容易参与 "虚拟 "社交互动。我们的发现揭示了硬币的光明面,那就是这种影响似乎会随着时间的推移而减弱。本文分析的大型行为数据集(1,608 个事件;248 人)还显示,在使用智能手机时,熟悉对象之间的模仿反应高于陌生人之间的模仿反应。由此看来,智能手机操作中的模仿行为可被视为联合行动的一个范例,它促进了个体间行为的同步性,从长远来看,可转化为社会纽带的形成。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
8.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: Human Nature is dedicated to advancing the interdisciplinary investigation of the biological, social, and environmental factors that underlie human behavior. It focuses primarily on the functional unity in which these factors are continuously and mutually interactive. These include the evolutionary, biological, and sociological processes as they interact with human social behavior; the biological and demographic consequences of human history; the cross-cultural, cross-species, and historical perspectives on human behavior; and the relevance of a biosocial perspective to scientific, social, and policy issues.
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