Title of article
Procedural justice effects on self-esteem under certainty versus uncertainty emotions
Author/Authors
David De Cremer and Alain Van Hiel، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
10
From page
278
To page
287
Abstract
Building upon the idea that procedural justice
effects are more pronounced when uncertainty is high, we
proposed that recall of an uncertainty-eliciting emotion
(fear) will render people more responsive to variations in
procedural justice than will recall of a certainty-eliciting
emotion (disgust). Results from Study 1, (n = 79 undergraduate
students) confirmed that a fair procedure (voice
condition) enhanced self-esteem relative to an unfair procedure
(no voice condition) to a greater extent when people
recalled fear than when they recalled disgust. Results from
Study 2 (n = 147 undergraduate students) also showed that
a fair, relative to an unfair, procedure enhanced self-esteem
more strongly when recalling the emotion of fear rather than
disgust, but only when these emotions were recalled from a
self-immersed than a self-distanced perspective. These
findings confirm that discrete emotions that orient people to
interpret situations in uncertain versus certain ways are
important antecedents of procedural justice effects.
Keywords
Procedural justice Uncertainty Discrete emotions Self-esteem Certainty appraisals
Journal title
MOTIVATION AND EMOTION
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
MOTIVATION AND EMOTION
Record number
711630
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