No Space for Others? On the Increase of Students’ Self-Focus When Prodded to Think About Many Others

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Abstract

In the present experiment, participants read about the presence of many versus few others in typical student-life situations. They subsequently wrote an essay about their perspectives on learning in groups. Using the program Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count to analyze these essays signified that participants who read prompts that involved many (vs. few) other students used more first-person singular pronouns and fewer words related to others. We interpret this increase in self-focus as a consequence of induced social crowding.

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Hellmann, J. H., Adelt, M. H., & Jucks, R. (2016). No Space for Others? On the Increase of Students’ Self-Focus When Prodded to Think About Many Others. Journal of Language and Social Psychology, 35(6), 698–707. https://doi.org/10.1177/0261927X16629521

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