Authors
Ashley M Votruba, Oliver Sng, Virginia SY Kwan
Publication date
2015/11
Journal
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Volume
46
Issue
10
Pages
1324-1327
Publisher
Sage Publications
Description
Shteynberg (this issue) reviews how group attention increases the psychological prominence of the information observed in group settings, serves to better embed descriptive norms making them more dominant in people’s cognitions, and acts as an axis of group communication and cooperation. We find the research on group attention compelling and an interesting addition to this special issue on Intersubjective Norms. The findings regarding group attention suggest that it generally functions like a cognitive heuristic (ie, an automatic process that occurs largely without people’s awareness or control). Yet, we question whether there are conditions under which individuals would not use group attention to determine descriptive norms and instead use other methods for focusing their attention (possibly moving them toward more deliberative cognitive processing). In this comment, we aim to highlight and suggest …
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