Literature DB >> 33649209

Do conversations end when people want them to?

Adam M Mastroianni1, Daniel T Gilbert1, Gus Cooney2, Timothy D Wilson3.   

Abstract

Do conversations end when people want them to? Surprisingly, behavioral science provides no answer to this fundamental question about the most ubiquitous of all human social activities. In two studies of 932 conversations, we asked conversants to report when they had wanted a conversation to end and to estimate when their partner (who was an intimate in Study 1 and a stranger in Study 2) had wanted it to end. Results showed that conversations almost never ended when both conversants wanted them to and rarely ended when even one conversant wanted them to and that the average discrepancy between desired and actual durations was roughly half the duration of the conversation. Conversants had little idea when their partners wanted to end and underestimated how discrepant their partners' desires were from their own. These studies suggest that ending conversations is a classic "coordination problem" that humans are unable to solve because doing so requires information that they normally keep from each other. As a result, most conversations appear to end when no one wants them to.

Entities:  

Keywords:  conversation; social interaction; social judgment

Year:  2021        PMID: 33649209     DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2011809118

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  4 in total

1.  Conversations, and how we end them.

Authors:  Elizabeth Stokoe
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2021-05       Impact factor: 49.962

Review 2.  The computational challenge of social learning.

Authors:  Oriel FeldmanHall; Matthew R Nassar
Journal:  Trends Cogn Sci       Date:  2021-09-25       Impact factor: 20.229

3.  Eye contact marks the rise and fall of shared attention in conversation.

Authors:  Sophie Wohltjen; Thalia Wheatley
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2021-09-14       Impact factor: 11.205

4.  It Takes Two: Interpersonal Neural Synchrony Is Increased after Musical Interaction.

Authors:  Alexander Khalil; Gabriella Musacchia; John Rehner Iversen
Journal:  Brain Sci       Date:  2022-03-20
  4 in total

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