Previous research has shown that behavioural mimicry fosters affiliation, and can be used to infer whether people belong to the same social unit. However, we still know very little about the generalizability of these findings and the individual factors involved. The present study intends to disentangle two important variables and assess their importance for affiliation: the matching in time of the behaviours versus their matching in form. In order to address this issue, we presented participants with short videos in which two actors displayed a set of small movements (e.g. crossing their legs, folding their arms, tapping their fingers) arranged to be either contingent in time or in form. A dark filter was used to eliminate ostensive group m...
The tendency to mimic the behaviour of others is affected by a variety of social factors, and it has...
Contains fulltext : 90102.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Mimicry has be...
Research on mimicry has demonstrated that individuals imitate in-group members more strongly than ou...
Previous research has shown that behavioural mimicry fosters affiliation, and can be used to infer w...
Previous research has shown that behavioural mimicry fosters affiliation, and can be used to infer w...
Actions of others automatically prime similar responses in an agent’s behavioural repertoire. As a c...
In naturalistic interpersonal settings, mimicry or ‘automatic imitation’ generates liking, affiliati...
Abstract: Aims: For social psychologists, mimicry could serve a function of “social glue”, binding p...
Previous research suggests that non-verbal mimicry, the copying of another’s body movements during i...
The ‘social glue’ function of nonverbal mimicry has received much support in the empirical literatur...
There is a broad theoretical and empirical interest in spontaneous mimicry, or the automatic reprodu...
One remarkable feature of social interactions is spontaneous mimicry. People have a tendency to unco...
INTRODUCTION: Do we always do what others do, and, if not, when and under what conditions do we do s...
This study investigated the effects of being mimicked on automatic imitation indices and social cohe...
Imitation–matching the configural body movements of another individual–plays a crucial part in socia...
The tendency to mimic the behaviour of others is affected by a variety of social factors, and it has...
Contains fulltext : 90102.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Mimicry has be...
Research on mimicry has demonstrated that individuals imitate in-group members more strongly than ou...
Previous research has shown that behavioural mimicry fosters affiliation, and can be used to infer w...
Previous research has shown that behavioural mimicry fosters affiliation, and can be used to infer w...
Actions of others automatically prime similar responses in an agent’s behavioural repertoire. As a c...
In naturalistic interpersonal settings, mimicry or ‘automatic imitation’ generates liking, affiliati...
Abstract: Aims: For social psychologists, mimicry could serve a function of “social glue”, binding p...
Previous research suggests that non-verbal mimicry, the copying of another’s body movements during i...
The ‘social glue’ function of nonverbal mimicry has received much support in the empirical literatur...
There is a broad theoretical and empirical interest in spontaneous mimicry, or the automatic reprodu...
One remarkable feature of social interactions is spontaneous mimicry. People have a tendency to unco...
INTRODUCTION: Do we always do what others do, and, if not, when and under what conditions do we do s...
This study investigated the effects of being mimicked on automatic imitation indices and social cohe...
Imitation–matching the configural body movements of another individual–plays a crucial part in socia...
The tendency to mimic the behaviour of others is affected by a variety of social factors, and it has...
Contains fulltext : 90102.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Mimicry has be...
Research on mimicry has demonstrated that individuals imitate in-group members more strongly than ou...