Page [58 . mm ae Bo individual within the group, the group sf ee likely 1E Goontingous a, 2 seems to be an entity of its own and the {PSHE LS Bmontonmgst rs motors oma. individual soldier seems to have become synchronizedmay individuals. fe a cog in the social machine. Mob —-grdtip»PoritaneouslyeventGthers beh or ; ; “Eaeesystem eae Clapping oO saaveOr behavior, crowds at sporting events, and so a ial Person enon giz soldiers in formation all suggest that pm Ore gacsuien® 4 when we are organized to act together, "OE the group becomes an emergent entity Chapter 6° that can submerge the sense of the The S . f Individual individual self. This apparent social © Conetions ou 1. ua absorption stands in contrast to our _ vonsclOUSHESS al typical experience of being autonomous, The Dissolution of Self and Other self-aware agents in the world. The Boundaries dissolution of the boundary between the When we watch a group of self and the group is one manifestation soldiers marching in formation, we see of the social brain and the mechanisms the behavior of the group synchronized. that support our ability to connect with Although we can make out the others. po Although not everyone has the The lead author is Gin R. Semin, Ph.D., an experience of marching in a band or Academy Professor, Royal Netherlands running with a mob, most people have Academy of Arts and Sciences, at Utrecht b < Univers; een part of an audience at a concert or niversity, The Netherlands. He is the founding : Scientific Director of the Kurt Lewin Graduate play. At the end ofa particularly School , a past president of the European thrilling performance, an audience can Association of Experimental Social Psychology, be moved spontaneously as a group to and the Chair of the International Committee of clap wildly. In these situations, we the Association for Psychological Science. lence Tire feel ine wot serpin to our fost ay Semin’s research is primarily driven by an . 8 gl 8 interest in communication, social co