Interpersonal Synchrony and Implicit Identification

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Abstract

The transformative effects of interpersonal synchrony on reshaping the relationship between the self and the group by fostering self-other blurring are well-documented. However, these findings largely rely on self-reported measures, leaving aspects of the self inaccessible to explicit measures unexplored. We combined the Implicit Association Task (IAT) with conventional explicit evaluations of self-other blurring to examine how experiences of synchronous movement may also swiftly shape implicit measures indicative of self-other blurring. In three online experiments participants experienced synchronous movement as opposed to no movement (Experiment 1) or unpredictable movement (Experiment 2) or asynchronous movement (Experiment 3) with virtually presented agents. Our data indicate that synchronous movement led to higher levels of self-other blurring on the Inclusion of Other in Self (IOS) scale and implicit self-concept evaluations on the IAT. Participants demonstrated a preference for associating self-related words with images of the synchronous group, while associating other-related words with images from the no-movement, unpredictable, and asynchronous movement groups. This suggests that experiencing synchronous movement with a group influences implicit semantic self-associations. These findings suggest that interpersonal synchrony may alter self-concept at both an embodied and semantic level, extending beyond conscious affiliation. Our combined methodology offers a deeper insight into the impact of synchronous experiences on self-constructs and social relationships.

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