Subscribe
The latest psychology and neuroscience discoveries.
My Account
  • Mental Health
  • Social Psychology
  • Cognitive Science
  • Psychopharmacology
  • Neuroscience
  • About
No Result
View All Result
PsyPost
PsyPost
No Result
View All Result
Home Exclusive Social Psychology

New psychology research finds deep conversations with strangers tend to go better than people expect

by Eric W. Dolan
December 10, 2021
in Social Psychology
Share on TwitterShare on Facebook
Follow PsyPost on Google News

The findings from a series of experiments published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology: Attitudes and Social Cognition suggest that people often underestimate how much others are interested in having deep and meaningful conversations. The study found that people consistently expected deep conversations with strangers to be more awkward and less fulfilling than they actually were.

“People are highly social, and so connecting with others tends to be a major source of happiness in people’s lives,” said study author Michael Kardas, a postdoctoral fellow in Management and Marketing at Northwestern University. “Yet people are often reluctant to connect deeply with strangers, at least partly because people assume that strangers will be uninterested in having meaningful conversations with them. We wanted to understand whether people’s concerns about connecting deeply with strangers are warranted.”

The researchers conducted twelve experiments with more than 1,800 participants in total to examine the degree to which others are interested in connecting through conversation.

In the first initial experiments, participants discussed intimate questions with a stranger, such as “Can you describe a time you cried in front of another person?” The participants reported how they expected to feel after these conversations and then reported their actual experiences. Participants underestimated both their own interest in listening to the other person and how interested they perceive their partner would be in listening to them. Participants also reported feeling less awkward, and happier and more connected to their partner than they anticipated.

“Deep conversations between strangers tend to go better than people expect,” Kardas told PsyPost. “Before speaking, people expected strangers to be relatively uninterested in the content of the conversation. Yet after speaking, people indicated that the person they spoke with was more interested and caring than they expected. As a result, people felt more connected and happier after speaking with a stranger than they had anticipated, and deep conversations between strangers felt less awkward than expected as well.”

The researchers also compared shallow versus deep discussion questions, and compared conversations between strangers versus known family members or friends.

Both deep and shallow conversations with strangers felt less awkward and led to greater feelings of connectedness and enjoyment than the participants had expected. But the difference in participants’ expectations and their actual experience was significantly larger for deep conversations.

The researchers also found that participants expected family members or friends to be more caring and interested than strangers, and they more accurately predicted how awkward, enjoyable, and happy they would feel in a deep conversation with family members or friends compared with strangers. The finding suggests that “people refrain from having deep and intimate conversations when they are concerned that another person will be uncaring and indifferent toward the conversation.”

In a more direct test of their hypotheses, the researchers had participants engage in a shallow conversation with one stranger and a deep conversation with another stranger. Most participants expected to prefer the shallow conversation, but ended up preferring the deep conversation after having both of them.

“People seemed to imagine that revealing something meaningful or important about themselves in conversation would be met with blank stares and silence, only to find this wasn’t true in the actual conversation,” said co-author Nicholas Epley, a professor at the University of Chicago, in a news release. “Human beings are deeply social and tend to reciprocate in conversation. If you share something meaningful and important, you are likely to get something meaningful and important exchanged in return, leading to a considerably better conversation.”

The researchers also found evidence that miscalibrated expectations could create a psychological barrier to deeper conversations. Participants who expected they would be speaking to a caring stranger tended to choose to discuss deeper questions than participants who expected to speak to a stranger who was described as indifferent. Simply informing participants that their beliefs about others’ interest in having deep conversations tended to be systematically miscalibrated also resulted in them choose to discuss deeper questions.

“Our participants’ expectations about deeper conversations were not woefully misguided, but they were reliably miscalibrated in a way that could keep people from engaging a little more deeply with others in their daily lives,” Epley said. “As the pandemic wanes and we all get back to talking with each other again, being aware that others also like meaningful conversation might lead you to spend less time in small talk and have more pleasant interactions as a result.”

“One of the most important steps in connecting deeply with a stranger is reaching out and saying ‘hello’ to begin with,” Kardas added. “Once you start talking, you can raise deeper conversation topics that reveal something important about who you are as a person. And the more you have deep conversations, the more you’re likely to recognize that others are interested in having deep conversations with you as well.”

The study, “Overly Shallow?: Miscalibrated Expectations Create a Barrier to Deeper Conversation“, was authored by Michael Kardas, Amit Kumar, and Nicholas Epley.

TweetSendScanShareSendPin5ShareShareShareShareShare

RELATED

New psychology research: Feeling politically excluded heightens antisocial tendencies
Political Psychology

New psychology research: Feeling politically excluded heightens antisocial tendencies

June 1, 2025

Being left out by political allies or rivals makes people feel less accepted and more inclined to lash out at opponents, new research shows. The emotional toll of political exclusion could be a key driver of deepening polarization in the United States.

Read moreDetails
Here’s what the data says about who actually benefits from DEI
Business

Here’s what the data says about who actually benefits from DEI

May 31, 2025

What’s the actual impact of diversity, equity, and inclusion? A sociologist unpacks decades of research showing how DEI programs affect businesses, education, and the broader economy—highlighting who benefits, who doesn’t, and what the data really says.

Read moreDetails
Sheriff partisanship doesn’t appear to shape extremist violence in the United States
Political Psychology

Sheriff partisanship doesn’t appear to shape extremist violence in the United States

May 30, 2025

New research shows that partisan sheriffs in the United States, unlike local officials in some Global South countries, do not influence the prevalence of political violence, pointing to possible institutional differences across global democratic contexts.

Read moreDetails
Frequent fights may explain why neurotic people feel less satisfied in relationships
Relationships and Sexual Health

Frequent fights may explain why neurotic people feel less satisfied in relationships

May 30, 2025

A new study suggests that neurotic individuals may damage their romantic relationships by frequently engaging in conflict behaviors like yelling or withdrawal. These actions, not simply a lack of affection, appear to explain why they report lower relationship satisfaction.

Read moreDetails
Narcissistic CEOs are more likely to fake emotions when they feel lonely, study finds
Business

Narcissistic CEOs are more likely to fake emotions when they feel lonely, study finds

May 29, 2025

When narcissistic CEOs feel lonely, they are more likely to hide their true emotions and perform socially expected ones instead, according to a new study examining how personality and isolation shape emotional behavior at the executive level.

Read moreDetails
A single Trump tweet has been connected to a rise in arrests of white Americans
Authoritarianism

New study helps explain rising Trump support among minority voters

May 29, 2025

The belief that only conservatives prefer authoritarian leaders is upended by new research showing ethnic minorities—regardless of political affiliation—are more supportive of strong leadership than White liberals. The study suggests generalized trust is a key psychological factor.

Read moreDetails
Poor sleep can bring out the ‘dark side’ of personality at work, study finds
Business

Poor sleep can bring out the ‘dark side’ of personality at work, study finds

May 29, 2025

New research shows that bad sleep can bring out the worst in people at work. Employees who slept poorly were more likely to display manipulative, narcissistic, and emotionally detached behaviors—traits linked to the so-called “dark triad” of personality.

Read moreDetails
Encountering romantic temptation nudges men and women toward different types of purchases
Business

Encountering romantic temptation nudges men and women toward different types of purchases

May 28, 2025

Experiencing romantic desire for someone outside a relationship can trigger subtle psychological shifts. A new study reveals that these feelings influence what people buy—encouraging men to seek shared experiences and women to opt for practical, lasting possessions.

Read moreDetails

SUBSCRIBE

Go Ad-Free! Click here to subscribe to PsyPost and support independent science journalism!

STAY CONNECTED

LATEST

Neuroscience breakthroughs: Surprising truths about memory revealed in 7 recent studies

Antidepressant withdrawal may be more persistent than doctors realize

Playing Fortnite linked to stronger peer relationships in boys

AI-powered study sheds light on how QAnon beliefs shatter family bonds

New study maps psychological pathway from childhood abuse to adolescent addiction

Testosterone heightens men’s sensitivity to social feedback and reshapes self-esteem

Estrogen curbs fentanyl intake by suppressing brain’s reward response

New psychology research: Feeling politically excluded heightens antisocial tendencies

         
       
  • Contact us
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms and Conditions
[Do not sell my information]

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

Subscribe
  • My Account
  • Cognitive Science Research
  • Mental Health Research
  • Social Psychology Research
  • Drug Research
  • Relationship Research
  • About PsyPost
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy