Excited to share the first paper out of my PhD, now published @CognitionJourn! The joint outcome of work with David Dignath and Günther Knoblich.
https://t.co/tQS0BdhbxF
We find new evidence that co-actors represent joint actions on a group level. WE > ME.
Thread: 1/
Towards mechanistic explanations of interpersonal social coordination through interdisciplinary integration! Very inspiring and resonating paper that reads like a primer to the research program of @ceu's cognitive science department. Glad to be part of it.
https://t.co/Y1kQGfnlkK
Once, we ran a study on Prolific and a participant wrote on Reddit that the study “Felt like I was losing the will to live.” I went on the Prolific Subreddit (24k members!) and asked what matters. Here is what they told me. A thread on happier participants and better studies 1/9
Together, our results inform current debates on the nature of action-outcome learning in individual and joint action settings and provide novel evidence that co-actors form group-level representations of their joint actions. 12/12
Excited to share the first paper out of my PhD, now published @CognitionJourn! The joint outcome of work with David Dignath and Günther Knoblich.
https://t.co/tQS0BdhbxF
We find new evidence that co-actors represent joint actions on a group level. WE > ME.
Thread: 1/
Following this explanation, the performance disadvantage in the jointly comp. vs. jointly incomp. conditions could be the result of higher cognitive demands related to the implementation of S-R rules encoded on a group compared to an individual level. 11/
As the topic gets momentum, I have made my master's thesis on the sense of agency in joint action now publicly availabe on researchgate. Give it a read, get inspired, reach out.
https://t.co/OOKyzzkNzL
JAM is back! If you are interested in joint action research you must come to Budapest this July (10-12.07, 2023). Submit your talk or poster by February 28th! Visit https://t.co/ShPVrKj3SD for info.
Looking for cogsci introductory textbooks for an undergrad course targeted at 1st-semester students in the social sciences. Main aim is to provide an overview of how individual-level explanations can contribute to the understanding of more large-scale societal phenomena. Hints?