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The cognitive cost of closeness: Interpersonal closeness reduces accuracy and slows down decision making

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posted on 2022-02-25, 14:41 authored by Pınar Ugurlar, Nebi Sümer, Ann-Christin PostenAnn-Christin Posten
Interpersonal closeness increases the overlap between mental representations of the self and the other, thus rendering it more difficult to differentiate between self- and other-related information.We suggest that closeness challenges computational capac ity during decision-making when the decision requires a differentiation between self and other-related information. Correlational Study 1 showed that when participants imagined engaging in a two-person economic problem-solving task with another per son, their cognitive performance decreased with increased levels of closeness felt toward their counterpart. Three experiments showed that when participants engaged in the problem-solving task with a close (vs. a distant) other, they tended to recall the correct solutions less (Study 2), used more time to find the solution (Study 3) and gave less accurate responses under time pressure (Study 4). These four studies are the first to jointly demonstrate that closeness influences interpersonal decision processes by being cognitively more costly.

History

Publication

European Journal of Social Psychology;51, pp. 1007– 1018

Publisher

Wiley and Sons Ltd

Note

peer-reviewed

Other Funding information

DFG; German Science Foundation

Language

English

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