2020
DOI: 10.1017/s0140525x19003212
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Shared reality and abstraction: The social nature of predictive models

Abstract: We propose that abstraction is an interpersonal process and serves a social function. Research on shared reality shows that in communication, people raise their level of abstraction in order to create a common understanding with their communication partner, which can subsequently distort their mental representation of the object of communication. This work demonstrates that, beyond building accurate models, abstraction also functions to build accurate models but also to build socially shared models – to create… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…When a person adopts the perspective of a collective agent while reflecting on the belief that the comedian is funny, there is a unified social perspective on the comedian, leaving no other co-observer whose perspective may be in doubt. Supporting this view are empirical literatures on collective attention (e.g., Shteynberg, 2015a, 2015b, 2018), shared reality (e.g., Rossignac-Milon et al, 2020), collective efficacy (Bandura, 2000), group emotions (E. R. Smith & Mackie, 2015), and I-sharing (e.g., Pinel et al, 2006), which, we believe, suggest that collective psychological states prepare people for collective action by synchronizing cognition and motivation (e.g., Bandura, 2000; Shteynberg, 2010; Shteynberg et al, 2016; Shteynberg & Galinsky, 2011), affect and attitudes (e.g., Echterhoff et al, 2009; Rossignac-Milon et al, 2021; E.…”
Section: Social Identity and Collective Agencymentioning
confidence: 94%
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“…When a person adopts the perspective of a collective agent while reflecting on the belief that the comedian is funny, there is a unified social perspective on the comedian, leaving no other co-observer whose perspective may be in doubt. Supporting this view are empirical literatures on collective attention (e.g., Shteynberg, 2015a, 2015b, 2018), shared reality (e.g., Rossignac-Milon et al, 2020), collective efficacy (Bandura, 2000), group emotions (E. R. Smith & Mackie, 2015), and I-sharing (e.g., Pinel et al, 2006), which, we believe, suggest that collective psychological states prepare people for collective action by synchronizing cognition and motivation (e.g., Bandura, 2000; Shteynberg, 2010; Shteynberg et al, 2016; Shteynberg & Galinsky, 2011), affect and attitudes (e.g., Echterhoff et al, 2009; Rossignac-Milon et al, 2021; E.…”
Section: Social Identity and Collective Agencymentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Matching representations of co-experienced objects is critical and can emerge from several processes. Some research suggests that when aiming to share interpretations of co-experienced objects, for example, people raise their level of abstraction to create a common field of understanding (Rossignac-Milon et al, 2020). Another possibility is that engaging in collective experiences increases the salience of any social identities that are shared with co-attendees.…”
Section: Looking Forward: Collective Agency and Social Identity In Hu...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…But individuals do not only spontaneously use abstraction to traverse distance, abstraction does actually afford the overcoming of social distance by broadening one’s social scope. That is, abstraction moves attention away from the egocentric “me here and now” toward the “we” that subsumes “me” and “you” (Rossignac-Milon et al, 2020). For instance, manipulated abstraction facilitates visual perspective-taking (Libby et al, 2009), the use of more first-person plural pronouns (“We/Us”) than first-person singular pronouns (“I/Me”; Yin et al, 2022), and a cognitive orientation that encourages broader, more inclusive categorization (Levy et al, 2002; Wakslak et al, 2008), supporting the idea of a broader social scope when thinking abstractly (vs. concretely).…”
Section: The Function Of Abstractionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many trained in the sciences learn to think of reality as a singularity. The scientific approach to discovery assumes that reality is one thing, experienced by many as a shared reality (Rossignac-Milon et al, 2020). Parts of it can be verified as true empirically through replicable experimentation.…”
Section: Is Reality a Reality? How Science And Real-life Differmentioning
confidence: 99%