Authors: Witt, Sarah
Seehagen, Sabine
Zmyj, Norbert
Title: Stress affects the prediction of others’ behavior
Language (ISO): en
Abstract: Predicting behavior of other people is vital for successful social interactions. We tested whether a stress-induced cortisol increase affects healthy young men’s prediction of another individual’s behavior. Forty-two participants were randomly assigned to a stress or to a control condition. Afterwards, they participated in a modified false-belief task that not only tests false-belief understanding but also the tendency to predict another person’s future behavior based on his former behavior. Subjective ratings and salivary cortisol concentrations revealed a successful stress induction. Stress did not affect participants’ attribution of false beliefs but it increased the probability to predict that a protagonist would act according to his former behavior. Recognizing that stress fosters the interpretation of others’ behavior following their former behavior and not their current goals extends previous research showing that stress fosters our own habitual behavior.
Subject Headings: Cortisol
Social cognition
Psychological stress
Prefrontal cortex
Behavior
Reasoning
Learning
Theory of mind
Subject Headings (RSWK): Hydrocortison |
Soziale Wahrnehmung |
Stress |
Lernen
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2003/41363
http://dx.doi.org/10.17877/DE290R-23206
Issue Date: 2023-04-13
Appears in Collections:Lehrbereich für Entwicklungspsychologie

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