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Self-invitation hesitation: how and why people fail to ask to join the plans of others

Self-invitation hesitation: how and why people fail to ask to join the plans of others
Self-invitation hesitation: how and why people fail to ask to join the plans of others
Spending time with others affords numerous benefits. One way a person can spend time with others is through a self-invitation—asking to join the plans of others. We address the psychological processes involved with self-invitations to everyday social activities from both the self-inviter’s perspective and the perspective of those with the plans (“plan-holders”). Across eight studies (seven preregistered), we demonstrate that potential self-inviters fail to ask to join the plans of others as often as plan-holders would prefer, because potential self-inviters overestimate how irritated plan-holders would be by such self-invitations. Further, we show that these asymmetries are rooted in differing viewpoints about the mindsets of plan-holders when they originally made the plans. Namely, potential self-inviters exaggerate the likelihood that plan-holders had already considered inviting them but decided against it (vs. made plans without considering inviting them). We conclude by discussing the various implications of our findings.
invitations, self-invitations, misprediction, social psychology, judgment and decision making
0146-1672
Givi, Julian
a14f4e10-aa38-482e-a247-6021789fb323
Grossman, Daniel M.
326c11e9-c644-4243-9560-bd500e1f01a0
Kirk, Colleen P.
4a0c3903-f9d1-49a7-b3a7-99eb5ea7d66f
Sedikides, Constantine
9d45e66d-75bb-44de-87d7-21fd553812c2
Givi, Julian
a14f4e10-aa38-482e-a247-6021789fb323
Grossman, Daniel M.
326c11e9-c644-4243-9560-bd500e1f01a0
Kirk, Colleen P.
4a0c3903-f9d1-49a7-b3a7-99eb5ea7d66f
Sedikides, Constantine
9d45e66d-75bb-44de-87d7-21fd553812c2

Givi, Julian, Grossman, Daniel M., Kirk, Colleen P. and Sedikides, Constantine (2025) Self-invitation hesitation: how and why people fail to ask to join the plans of others. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin. (doi:10.1177/01461672251324232).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Spending time with others affords numerous benefits. One way a person can spend time with others is through a self-invitation—asking to join the plans of others. We address the psychological processes involved with self-invitations to everyday social activities from both the self-inviter’s perspective and the perspective of those with the plans (“plan-holders”). Across eight studies (seven preregistered), we demonstrate that potential self-inviters fail to ask to join the plans of others as often as plan-holders would prefer, because potential self-inviters overestimate how irritated plan-holders would be by such self-invitations. Further, we show that these asymmetries are rooted in differing viewpoints about the mindsets of plan-holders when they originally made the plans. Namely, potential self-inviters exaggerate the likelihood that plan-holders had already considered inviting them but decided against it (vs. made plans without considering inviting them). We conclude by discussing the various implications of our findings.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 18 March 2025
Keywords: invitations, self-invitations, misprediction, social psychology, judgment and decision making

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 499689
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/499689
ISSN: 0146-1672
PURE UUID: e3004c25-3f7a-4cc1-b01d-c0df57cb519d
ORCID for Constantine Sedikides: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4036-889X

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 31 Mar 2025 16:53
Last modified: 01 Apr 2025 01:36

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Contributors

Author: Julian Givi
Author: Daniel M. Grossman
Author: Colleen P. Kirk

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