People expect others to take efficient paths toward goals. Inefficiency changes how we categorize actions, leading us to see actions as play (Chu & Schulz, 2020), or as movements performed for their own intrinsic value (Schachner & Carey, 2013). Here we find that performing actions for their own value (e.g., aesthetic value), versus for instrumental purposes, provides social information about others. In a pre-registered experiment (N=360), participants judged which character in a pair was more compassionate, or more selfish/manipulative. For one key pair (among distractors), both characters performed the same activity (music, painting, eating, exercising, math, being in nature), and we manipulated why: Either for its own aesthetic v...
Many authors have proposed that facial expressions, by conveying emotional states of the person we a...
This research investigates how the combination of aesthetically appealing and unappealing visual ele...
Studies suggest that threats to meaning elicit negative and defensive reactions, but sometimes can r...
Why do people try to influence the way others feel? Previous research offers two competing accounts ...
Prosocial acts—those that are costly to ourselves but benefit others—are a central component of huma...
What makes individuals conform or diverge after observing prosocial or selfish behavior by others? W...
Prosocial behaviours are essential for healthy social interactions, with established impacts on life...
What motivates people to regulate the emotions of others? Prior research has shown that people are m...
What makes individuals conform or diverge after observing prosocial or selfish behavior by others? W...
Theorists of human nature have long debated whether prosocial behavior is always self-interested, or...
Theories that reject the existence of altruism presume that emotional benefits serve as ulterior mot...
A continuous area of focus in the social sciences is the motivation for prosocial behavior, ...
Theories that reject the existence of altruism presume that emotional benefits serve as ulterior mot...
In two experiments, the authors investigated how differences in social value orientation predict eva...
Many authors have proposed that facial expressions, by conveying emotional states of the person we a...
This research investigates how the combination of aesthetically appealing and unappealing visual ele...
Studies suggest that threats to meaning elicit negative and defensive reactions, but sometimes can r...
Why do people try to influence the way others feel? Previous research offers two competing accounts ...
Prosocial acts—those that are costly to ourselves but benefit others—are a central component of huma...
What makes individuals conform or diverge after observing prosocial or selfish behavior by others? W...
Prosocial behaviours are essential for healthy social interactions, with established impacts on life...
What motivates people to regulate the emotions of others? Prior research has shown that people are m...
What makes individuals conform or diverge after observing prosocial or selfish behavior by others? W...
Theorists of human nature have long debated whether prosocial behavior is always self-interested, or...
Theories that reject the existence of altruism presume that emotional benefits serve as ulterior mot...
A continuous area of focus in the social sciences is the motivation for prosocial behavior, ...
Theories that reject the existence of altruism presume that emotional benefits serve as ulterior mot...
In two experiments, the authors investigated how differences in social value orientation predict eva...
Many authors have proposed that facial expressions, by conveying emotional states of the person we a...
This research investigates how the combination of aesthetically appealing and unappealing visual ele...
Studies suggest that threats to meaning elicit negative and defensive reactions, but sometimes can r...