The effect of psychological distance on automatic goal contagion

Compr Results Soc Psychol. 2016 Sep 1;1(1-3):51-85. doi: 10.1080/23743603.2017.1288877. Epub 2017 Mar 21.

Abstract

We investigated how psychological distance influences goal contagion (the extent to which people automatically adopt another person's goals). On the basis of construal-level theory, we predicted people would be more prone to goal contagion when primed with psychological distance (vs. closeness) because they would construe the other person's behavior in terms of its underlying goal. Alternatively, we predicted people primed with psychological closeness (vs. distance) would be more prone to goal contagion because closeness may increase the personal relevance of another's goals - a process not mediated by construal level. In two preregistered studies, participants read about a student whose behavior implied either an academic or a social goal. We manipulated (a) participants' level of mental construal with a mind-set task (Study 1) and (b) their social distance from another person who showed academic or social behaviors (Study 2). We measured performance on an anagram task as an indicator of academic goal contagion. For Study 1, we predicted that participants reading about academic (vs. social) behaviors would show a better anagram performance, especially when primed with an abstract mind-set. For Study 2, we predicted that construal level and relevance effects might cancel each other out, because distance triggers both high-level construal and less relevance. In contrast to the construal-level hypothesis, the mind-set manipulation did not affect goal contagion in Study 1. In accordance with the relevance hypothesis, psychological proximity increased goal contagion in Study 2. We discuss how the findings relate to previous findings on goal contagion and imitation.

Keywords: Construal-level theory; action identification; goal contagion; motivation; psychological distance.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [grant P25307-G22] and by a pre-registered research grant of the European Association of Social Psychology awarded to Jochim Hansen. The data collected for this pre-registered report can be assessed at https://osf.io/6qvk4/?view_only=5116f5cbd8804621a9426fa0be254d98