"One day Nicholas Epley was commuting
by train to his office at the University of Chicago. As a behavioral scientist
he’s well aware that social connection makes us happier, healthier and more
successful and generally contributes to the sweetness of life. Yet he looked
around his train car and realized: Nobody is talking to anyone! It was just
headphones and newspapers.
Questions popped into his head: What
the hell are we all doing here? Why don’t people do the thing that makes them
the most happy?
He discovered that one of the
reasons people are reluctant to talk to strangers on a train or plane is they
don’t think it will be enjoyable. They believe it will be awkward, dull and
tiring. In an online survey only 7 percent of
people said they would talk to a stranger in a waiting room. Only 24 percent
said they would talk to a stranger on a train.
But are these expectations correct?
Epley and his team have conducted years of research on this. They ask people to
make predictions going into social encounters. Then, afterward, they ask them
how it had gone.
They found that most of us are systematically mistaken
about how much we will enjoy a social encounter. Commuters expected to have
less pleasant rides if they tried to strike up a conversation with a stranger.
But their actual experience was precisely the opposite. People randomly
assigned to talk with a stranger enjoyed their trips consistently more than
those instructed to keep to themselves. Introverts sometimes go into these
situations with particularly low expectations, but both introverts and
extroverts tended to enjoy conversations more than riding solo.
It turns out many of us wear
ridiculously negative antisocial filters. Epley and his team found that people
underestimate how positively others will respond when they reach out to express
support. Research led by Stav Atir and Kristina Wald showed that most people underestimate how much they will learn from
conversations with strangers.
In other research, people
underestimated how much they would enjoy longer conversations with new
acquaintances. People underestimated how much they’re going to enjoy deeper
conversations compared to shallower conversations. They underestimated how much
they would like the person. They underestimated how much better their
conversation would be if they moved to a more intimate communications media —
talking on the phone rather than texting. In settings ranging from public parks
to online, people underestimated how positively giving a compliment to another
person would make the recipient feel.
We’re an extremely social species,
but many of us suffer from what Epley calls undersociality. We see the world in
anxiety-drenched ways that cause us to avoid social situations that would be
fun, educational and rewarding.
It’s not just talking to strangers.
Epley and his team asked people to compliment a friend or a family member.
People consistently underestimated how positively their recipients would react.
In one experiment visitors to a
skating rink in downtown Chicago were given a coupon for a cup of hot chocolate
and were asked to give it away to a stranger. The givers anticipated that the
gift would make the others feel good, but they underestimated how “big” this
gesture would feel to the other person.
Many of these misperceptions are
based on a deeper misperception. It’s about how people are seeing you. Entering
into a conversation, especially with strangers, is hard. People go in with
doubts about their own competence: Will they be able to start a conversation
well, or communicate their thoughts effectively?
But research suggests that when people are looking at you
during a conversation, they are not primarily thinking about your competence.
They are thinking about your warmth. Do you seem friendly, kind and
trustworthy? They just want to know you care.
Epley’s research illuminates a
mystery I’ve been thinking about for a while. Many of us have been writing about
the breakdown of social relationships. Books now appear with titles like “The
Lonely Century,” “The Crisis of Connection,” and “Lost Connections.”
But mass loneliness is a perversity.
If a bunch of people are lonely, why don’t they just hang out together? Maybe
it’s because people approach potential social encounters with unrealistically
anxious and negative expectations. Maybe if we understood this, we could alter
our behavior.
My general view is that the fate of
America will be importantly determined by how we treat each other in the
smallest acts of daily life. That means being a genius at the close at hand:
greeting a stranger, detecting the anxiety in somebody’s voice and asking
what’s wrong, knowing how to talk across difference. More lives are diminished
by the slow and frigid death of social closedness than by the short and glowing
risk of social openness.
The question is, can we get better?
I spoke to Epley about his work last week and found it extremely compelling.
Then this week I was on a plane and found myself … putting on headphones. But
Epley assures me that this research has transformed how he lives. Once you get
used to filling your day with social exercise, it gets easier and easier, and
more and more fun."
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