Title of article
The Approach and Avoidance Function of Guilt and Shame Emotions: Comparing Reactions to Self-Caused and Other-Caused Wrongdoing
Author/Authors
Toni Schmader and Brian Lickel، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
14
From page
42
To page
55
Abstract
Although theory suggests that guilt motivates approach tendencies and shame
motivates avoidance tendencies, research has not always supported these relationships.
The present study examined the degree to which shame and guilt are
uniquely predictive of avoidance and approach motives, respectively, for both
self-caused and other-caused wrongdoings. Results revealed that shame and guilt
are more highly correlated for self-caused compared to other-caused wrongdoings.
This greater blending of shame and guilt in response to self-caused acts
makes it somewhat more difficult to distinguish between different unique motivational
correlates of these two emotions. However, in response to other-caused
wrongdoings, shame uniquely predicted avoidance tendencies (distancing from
the event), whereas guilt uniquely predicted approach tendencies (repairing the
event). The implications for research on motivation, emotion, and social relations
are discussed.
Keywords
Guilt , group-based emotion , approach–avoidance motivation , shame
Journal title
MOTIVATION AND EMOTION
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
MOTIVATION AND EMOTION
Record number
711545
Link To Document