| Literature DB >> 30998766 |
Eshin Jolly1, Diana I Tamir2, Bethany Burum3, Jason P Mitchell3.
Abstract
Social connection can be a rich source of happiness. Humans routinely go out of their way to seek out social connection and avoid social isolation. What are the proximal forces that motivate people to share experiences with others? Here we used a novel experience-sharing and decision-making paradigm to understand the value of shared experiences. In seven experiments across Studies 1 and 2, participants demonstrated a strong motivation to engage in shared experiences. At the same time, participants did not report a commensurate increase in hedonic value or emotional amplification, suggesting that the motivation to share experiences need not derive from their immediate hedonic value. In Study 3, participants reported their explicit beliefs about the reasons people engage in shared experiences: Participants reported being motivated by the desire to forge a social connection. Together, these findings suggest that the desire to share an experience may be distinct from the subjective experience of achieving that state. People may be so driven to connect with each other that social experiences remain valuable even in the most minimalistic contexts.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30998766 PMCID: PMC6472755 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0215318
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Summary overview of Study 1.
| Study | Design | Content Type | Solo Rating | Shared Rating | Statistics [95% CI] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1a | In-lab; | Enjoyable Videos | |||
| 1b | In-lab; | Enjoyable Videos | |||
| 1c | In-lab; | Enjoyable Videos | |||
| Mixed-emotion Videos | |||||
| Sad Videos | |||||
| 1d | Online; | Enjoyable Videos |
* Means reflect standardized composite scores for Studies 1b, 1c, and 1d
Fig 1Effect sizes across Studies 1 and 2.
Effect sizes for the enjoyment (green) and emotional amplification (red) of shared experiences are centered on zero, while participants effect sizes for participants’ motivation to choose shared experiences (blue) are consistently large. Standardized effect estimates: Cohen’s d (Studies 1a, 1b, 1d; Studies 2a-c, Valuation), Cohen’s d (Study 1c) and standardized regression coefficients (Studies 2a-c, Enjoyment). 95% confidence intervals were calculated via bootstrapping (Studies 1a-d, Studies 2a-c, Valuation), or by assuming a quadratic log-likelihood surface (Wald-Method; Studies 2a-c, Enjoyment).
Summary overview of study 3.
| Study | Question | Responses | Statistics |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3a | Would you prefer a shared experience for less money or a solo experience for more money? | Solo = 123 | Exact binomial test, |
| 3a | Why (if share)? | Feel more connected = 12 | Montecarlo multinomial test, |
| 3a | Why do you think Amy engaged in a shared experience for less money? | Feel more connected = 75 | |
| 3a | Would you enjoy a shared experience for less money more or a solo experience for less money? | ||
| 3b | Would you prefer a shared experience or a solo experience? | Solo = 19 | Exact binomial test, |
| 3b | Why (if share)? | Feel more connected = 82 | Montecarlo multinomial test, |
| 3b | Would you enjoy a shared experience more or a solo experience more? |
*Values are mean ratings from 1 (share more) to 7 (solo more) for 3a Enjoyment and 3b Enjoyment. All other table values reflect participant counts.