Publication | Closed Access
Mental Exercising Through Simple Socializing: Social Interaction Promotes General Cognitive Functioning
228
Citations
73
References
2007
Year
Social IsolationPhysical ActivitySocial PsychologySocial SupportSocial ImpairmentPsychologySocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologyHealthy AgingMind-body ConnectionSocial Learning TheoryCognitive CommunicationHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceSocial SkillsCognitive FunctionSocial InteractionRehabilitationApplied Social PsychologyGeneral Cognitive FunctioningSocial CognitionCognitive PerformanceSocial BehaviorCognitive FunctioningHuman Interaction
Social interaction is a central feature of people's life and engages a variety of cognitive resources. Thus, social interaction should facilitate general cognitive functioning. Previous studies suggest such a link, but they used special populations (e.g., elderly with cognitive impairment), measured social interaction indirectly (e.g., via marital status), and only assessed effects of extended interaction in correlational designs. Here the relation between mental functioning and direct indicators of social interaction was examined in a younger and healthier population. Study 1 using survey methodology found a positive relationship between social interaction, assessed via amount of actual social contact, and cognitive functioning in people from three age groups including younger adults. Study 2 using an experimental design found that a small amount of social interaction (10 min) can facilitate cognitive performance. The findings are discussed in the context of the benefits social relationships have for so many aspects of people's lives.
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