London [UK], March 24 (ANI): Each person has multiple social identities, such as employee, parent, young person, friend, or even fan of a particular sports team.
Researchers have found that people can switch seamlessly between different social identities. The findings of the study were published in ‘Journal of Experimental Social Psychology’.
Previous research has shown that frequently switching task tends to result in lower performance: longer completion times and reduced accuracy.
The new study by the University of Exeter finds that identity switching may pose less difficulty.
“Our lives have sped up a lot in recent years and decades, so we have to switch more often between different identities. Due to the pandemic, many more people now work from home — so they no longer have the slow switch of a commute separating home from work,” said Anna Zinn, of the University of Exeter.
“Our research aimed to find whether rapidly activating different identities comes with a cost. We were surprised to find that these switches are extremely effective — people can switch quite rapidly with no apparent difficulty,” Zinn added.
The researchers noted, however, that this ability might come with a downside.
“We might have little control over these switches. For someone working from home, it may be important to stay in a professional identity — but our findings suggest you could easily be drawn away from it,” Zinn explained.
“The next stage of our research is to examine these possible drawbacks, and whether steps such as having a dedicated workspace at home can limit them,” Zinn added.
The researchers conducted several studies using the “Implicit Association Test,” in which participants have to quickly sort words and images into categories.
Using this method, participants were made to think about a certain identity — for example, the researchers encouraged them to think of themselves as “young people” by asking them to sort images of faces by age.
It was then possible to make people switch to a different identity — or at other times stay in the same identity — to observe the effects.
One study also created a new “minimal group” identity, by asking participants to remember images of people’s faces as members of a newly formed group (the participant was encouraged to think of these people and themselves as part of the “blue group”).
Switching between this new identity and existing identities was also seamless.
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