Nostalgia proneness and empathy: Generality, underlying mechanism, and implications for prosocial behavior
Nostalgia proneness and empathy: Generality, underlying mechanism, and implications for prosocial behavior
Objective: Nostalgia is a sentimental longing for one’s past. We examined the hypotheses (rooted in attachment theory and research) that nostalgia prone individuals, by virtue of their greater attachment security, are more empathic and enact more prosocial behavior.
Method: In five studies, testing 1923 participants (Nrange = 132-823, 52.42% women, Agerange = 8-90 years), we measured nostalgia proneness and affective empathy. Additionally, we measured cognitive empathy in Study 3, attachment security in Studies 4-5, and prosocial behavior in Study 5.
Results: Nostalgia proneness was positively related to affective empathy among younger and older adults (Studies 1, 3-5) and among children (Study 2). This association was stronger for affective empathy than cognitive empathy (Study 3). Also, attachment security mediated the relation between nostalgia proneness and affective empathy (Studies 4-5). Finally, nostalgia prone individuals were more likely to engage in prosocial behavior, and this relation was serially mediated by attachment security and affective empathy (Study 5).
Conclusion: The findings establish the empathic and prosocial character of nostalgia prone individuals, and clarify their personality profile.
attachment theory, donating, empathy, nostalgia proneness, prosocial behavior
485-500
Juhl, Jacob
1c3b38b1-ba9e-4f3c-8520-ebca3b712fa2
Wildschut, Tim
4452a61d-1649-4c4a-bb1d-154ec446ff81
Sedikides, Constantine
9d45e66d-75bb-44de-87d7-21fd553812c2
Diebel, Tara
8e059eeb-f7f4-40c2-9015-29f98b15c50c
Cheung, Wing-Yee
b23f492e-ee71-4823-a1a0-f08aa9cda26e
Vingerhoets, Ad J. J. M.
9e994c70-ddc4-4321-8eaf-43f82ce8471e
1 June 2020
Juhl, Jacob
1c3b38b1-ba9e-4f3c-8520-ebca3b712fa2
Wildschut, Tim
4452a61d-1649-4c4a-bb1d-154ec446ff81
Sedikides, Constantine
9d45e66d-75bb-44de-87d7-21fd553812c2
Diebel, Tara
8e059eeb-f7f4-40c2-9015-29f98b15c50c
Cheung, Wing-Yee
b23f492e-ee71-4823-a1a0-f08aa9cda26e
Vingerhoets, Ad J. J. M.
9e994c70-ddc4-4321-8eaf-43f82ce8471e
Juhl, Jacob, Wildschut, Tim, Sedikides, Constantine, Diebel, Tara, Cheung, Wing-Yee and Vingerhoets, Ad J. J. M.
(2020)
Nostalgia proneness and empathy: Generality, underlying mechanism, and implications for prosocial behavior.
Journal of Personality, 88 (3), .
(doi:10.1111/jopy.12505).
Abstract
Objective: Nostalgia is a sentimental longing for one’s past. We examined the hypotheses (rooted in attachment theory and research) that nostalgia prone individuals, by virtue of their greater attachment security, are more empathic and enact more prosocial behavior.
Method: In five studies, testing 1923 participants (Nrange = 132-823, 52.42% women, Agerange = 8-90 years), we measured nostalgia proneness and affective empathy. Additionally, we measured cognitive empathy in Study 3, attachment security in Studies 4-5, and prosocial behavior in Study 5.
Results: Nostalgia proneness was positively related to affective empathy among younger and older adults (Studies 1, 3-5) and among children (Study 2). This association was stronger for affective empathy than cognitive empathy (Study 3). Also, attachment security mediated the relation between nostalgia proneness and affective empathy (Studies 4-5). Finally, nostalgia prone individuals were more likely to engage in prosocial behavior, and this relation was serially mediated by attachment security and affective empathy (Study 5).
Conclusion: The findings establish the empathic and prosocial character of nostalgia prone individuals, and clarify their personality profile.
Text
Juhl_et_al-2019-Journal_of_Personality
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 19 August 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 23 August 2019
Published date: 1 June 2020
Keywords:
attachment theory, donating, empathy, nostalgia proneness, prosocial behavior
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 433543
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/433543
ISSN: 0022-3506
PURE UUID: 9e8e71fd-7c85-4bb6-a48b-30efde58f476
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Date deposited: 27 Aug 2019 16:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:53
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Contributors
Author:
Tara Diebel
Author:
Wing-Yee Cheung
Author:
Ad J. J. M. Vingerhoets
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