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

‘Collective mind’ bridges societal divides − psychology research explores how watching the same thing can bring people together

by Garriy Shteynberg
February 11, 2024
in Social Psychology
(Photo credit: OpenAI's DALL·E)

(Photo credit: OpenAI's DALL·E)

Share on TwitterShare on Facebook

Only about 1 in 4 Americans said that they had trust in the nation’s institutions in 2023 – with big business (1 in 7), television news (1 in 7) and Congress (1 in 12) scraping the very bottom.

While institutional trust is decreasing, political polarization is increasing. The majority of Republicans (72%) and Democrats (64%) think of each other as more immoral than other Americans – a nearly 30% rise from 2016 to 2022. When compared with similar democracies, the United States has exhibited the largest increase in animus toward the opposing political party over the past 40 years.

When public trust and political consensus disappear, what remains? This question has occupied my research for the past 20 years, both as a scholar trained in social anthropology, organizational science and social cognition and as a professor of psychology.

Researchers don’t have all the answers, but it seems that even in the absence of public trust and agreement, people can share experiences. Whether watching a spelling bee or a football game, “we” still exist if “we” can witness it together.

My colleagues and I call this human capacity to take a collective perspective theory of collective mind. The foundation of collective mind, and what we study in the lab, is shared attention, instances when people experience the world with others.

Shared attention amplifies experiences

Experiments in the laboratory with adults show that shared experiences amplify psychological and behavioral reactions to the world.

My colleagues and I find that compared with attending to the world alone, or at different times than others, synchronous attention with others yields stronger memories, deeper emotions and firmer motivations. Studies show that seeing words together renders them more memorable, watching sad movies together makes them sadder, and focusing together on shared goals increases efforts toward their pursuit. Sharing attention to the behavior of others yields more imitation of that behavior.

Google News Preferences Add PsyPost to your preferred sources

Critically, those experiencing something with you need not be physically present. Although in some experiments participants sit side by side, in other studies participants believe they are attending together from different lab rooms or even across the nation. Irrespective of the location, the sense that “we are attending” to something together at the same time – as compared with in solitude or on your own schedule – amplifies the experience.

Laboratories in the United States, Australia, Hungary, Germany and Denmark have found similar results. Notably, some studies have found that people want to have more shared experiences, even when they don’t actually enjoy them more than solitary experiences.

What’s behind these observations? As a social species that survives through joint action, human beings in general need a common baseline from which to act. When shared experiences amplify what we know together, it can guide subsequent behavior, rendering that behavior more understandable and useful to the collective.

Sharing attention builds relationships

Shared attention happens within the bounds of our cherished relationships and groups, like when friends go to a movie together, but also outside of them.

Research suggests that shared attention on a common subjective experience can build relationships across the political divide and strengthen cooperation among strangers. For instance, when people co-witness that they have the same gut reaction to an unfamiliar piece of music or a meaningless inkblot, they like each other more, even if they have opposing political leanings. Critically, relational benefits are more likely when such subjective experiences are shared simultaneously – instances when people are most likely to sense a shared mind.

People can be attending next to one another or thousands of miles apart, in groups of two or 200, and the results are the same – shared attention amplifies experiences, creates social bonds and even synchronizes individuals’ heartbeats and breaths.

Scientists studying kids find that interest in attending with others begins in the first year of human life, predating the development of language and preceding any notion of shared beliefs by several years. Human relationships don’t begin with sharing values; sharing attention comes first.

The role of shared attention in society

Before the advent of the internet, Americans shared attention broadly – they watched the same nightly news together, even if they did not always agree whether it was good or bad. Today, with people’s attention divided into media silos, there are more obstacles than ever to sharing attention with those with whom you disagree.

And yet, even when we can no longer agree on what “we” believe, sharing attention to the basic sights and sounds of our world connects us. These moments can be relatively small, like watching a movie in the theater, or large, like watching the Super Bowl. However, remembering that we are sharing such experiences with Americans of all political persuasions is important.

Consider the Federal Communications Commission’s fairness doctrine, a policy that controversial issues of public importance should receive balanced coverage, exposing audiences to differing views. In effect, it created episodes of shared attention across social, political and economic differences.

Institutional trust is now almost twofold lower than it was in 1987, the year the fairness doctrine was repealed. It is possible that the end of the fairness doctrine helped create a hyperpolarized media, where the norm is sharing attention with those who are ideologically similar.

Of course, sharing attention on divisive issues can be painful. Yet, I believe it may also push us beyond our national fracture and toward a revitalization of public trust.

Why? When we share awareness of the world with others, no matter how distinct our beliefs, we form a community of minds. We are no longer alone. If we are to restore public trust and national ideals, sharing attention across societal divides looks like a way forward.The Conversation

 

 

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

RELATED

Social media may be trapping us in a cycle of loneliness, new study suggests
Addiction

The hidden role of vulnerable dark personality traits in digital addiction

February 3, 2026
New research exposes an alarming trend in rates of suicide among Black women
Racism and Discrimination

Half of the racial mortality gap is explained by stress and inflammation

February 2, 2026
Dark personality traits flourish in these specific environments, huge new study reveals
Relationships and Sexual Health

For romantic satisfaction, quantity of affection beats similarity

February 2, 2026
Surprising link found between hyperthyroidism and dark personality traits
Social Psychology

New findings challenge assumptions about men’s reading habits

February 1, 2026
Alcohol shifts the brain into a fragmented and local state
Anxiety

Social anxiety has a “dark side” that looks nothing like shyness

February 1, 2026
Surprising link found between hyperthyroidism and dark personality traits
Social Psychology

Psychology study reveals how gratitude can backfire on your social standing

January 31, 2026
Surprising link found between hyperthyroidism and dark personality traits
Dark Triad

Surprising link found between hyperthyroidism and dark personality traits

January 31, 2026
New research links psychopathy to a proclivity for upskirting
Psychopathy

New research links psychopathy to a proclivity for upskirting

January 30, 2026

STAY CONNECTED

LATEST

Can shoes boost your brain power? What neuroscience says about the new claims

Shared viewing of erotic webcams is rare but may enhance relationship intimacy

Wealthier men show higher metabolism in brain regions controlling reward and stress

What your fears about the future might reveal about your cellular age

The hidden role of vulnerable dark personality traits in digital addiction

Depression and anxiety linked to stronger inflammation in sexual minority adults compared to heterosexuals

High-precision neurofeedback accelerates the mental health benefits of meditation

Stress does not appear to release stored THC into the bloodstream

RSS Psychology of Selling

  • Surprising link found between greed and poor work results among salespeople
  • Intrinsic motivation drives sales performance better than financial rewards
  • New research links faking emotions to higher turnover in B2B sales
  • How defending your opinion changes your confidence
  • The science behind why accessibility drives revenue in the fashion sector
       
  • 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