The world looks better together: How close others enhance our visual experiences |
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Authors: | ERICA J. BOOTHBY LEIGH K. SMITH MARGARET S. CLARK JOHN A. BARGH |
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Affiliation: | 1. Yale University;2. The University of California, Davis |
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Abstract: | People derive a number of benefits from sharing experiences with close others. However, most research on this topic has been restricted to forms of sharing involving explicit socializing, including verbal communication, emotion expression, and behavioral interaction. In two studies, these complexities were eliminated to find out whether merely experiencing visual stimuli (photographs) simultaneously with a close other—without communicating—enhances people's evaluations of those stimuli relative to coexperiencing the same stimuli with a stranger or alone. Compared to when viewers were alone, visual scenes were enhanced (better liked and seen as more real) when coexperienced with a close other and were liked less when coexperienced with a stranger. Implications for close relationships are discussed. |
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