Anxious and egocentric: how specific emotions influence perspective taking
Anxious and egocentric: how specific emotions influence perspective taking
People frequently feel anxious. Although prior research has extensively studied how feeling anxious shapes intrapsychic aspects of cognition, much less is known about how anxiety affects interpersonal aspects of cognition. Here, we examine the influence of incidental experiences of anxiety on perceptual and conceptual forms of perspective taking. Compared with participants experiencing other negative, high-arousal emotions (i.e., anger or disgust) or neutral feelings, anxious participants displayed greater egocentrism in their mental-state reasoning: They were more likely to describe an object using their own spatial perspective, had more difficulty resisting egocentric interference when identifying an object from others’ spatial perspectives, and relied more heavily on privileged knowledge when inferring others’ beliefs. Using both experimental-causal-chain and measurement-of-mediation approaches, we found that these effects were explained, in part, by uncertainty appraisal tendencies. Further supporting the role of uncertainty, a positive emotion associated with uncertainty (i.e., surprise) produced increases in egocentrism that were similar to anxiety. Collectively, the results suggest that incidentally experiencing emotions associated with uncertainty increase reliance on one’s own egocentric perspective when reasoning about the mental states of others.
374-391
Todd, Andrew R.
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Forstmann, Matthias
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Burgmer, Pascal
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Brooks, Alison Wood
f23a25f5-5f30-4577-a5ce-3bba1e1b148e
Galinsky, Adam D.
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1 January 2015
Todd, Andrew R.
e463a29a-bea1-44d1-9a81-f8c9162f096c
Forstmann, Matthias
2e2c943b-1e0b-4711-af32-6b84d9b2c895
Burgmer, Pascal
c8c43b56-572c-4242-800c-9f44ff648cec
Brooks, Alison Wood
f23a25f5-5f30-4577-a5ce-3bba1e1b148e
Galinsky, Adam D.
507e9c91-deab-4b92-8211-610f49c469f9
Todd, Andrew R., Forstmann, Matthias, Burgmer, Pascal, Brooks, Alison Wood and Galinsky, Adam D.
(2015)
Anxious and egocentric: how specific emotions influence perspective taking.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 144 (2), .
(doi:10.1037/xge0000048).
Abstract
People frequently feel anxious. Although prior research has extensively studied how feeling anxious shapes intrapsychic aspects of cognition, much less is known about how anxiety affects interpersonal aspects of cognition. Here, we examine the influence of incidental experiences of anxiety on perceptual and conceptual forms of perspective taking. Compared with participants experiencing other negative, high-arousal emotions (i.e., anger or disgust) or neutral feelings, anxious participants displayed greater egocentrism in their mental-state reasoning: They were more likely to describe an object using their own spatial perspective, had more difficulty resisting egocentric interference when identifying an object from others’ spatial perspectives, and relied more heavily on privileged knowledge when inferring others’ beliefs. Using both experimental-causal-chain and measurement-of-mediation approaches, we found that these effects were explained, in part, by uncertainty appraisal tendencies. Further supporting the role of uncertainty, a positive emotion associated with uncertainty (i.e., surprise) produced increases in egocentrism that were similar to anxiety. Collectively, the results suggest that incidentally experiencing emotions associated with uncertainty increase reliance on one’s own egocentric perspective when reasoning about the mental states of others.
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Published date: 1 January 2015
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Local EPrints ID: 479216
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479216
ISSN: 0096-3445
PURE UUID: 20666674-43ee-49bd-a11b-b69d85001b82
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Date deposited: 20 Jul 2023 16:45
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:16
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Author:
Andrew R. Todd
Author:
Matthias Forstmann
Author:
Pascal Burgmer
Author:
Alison Wood Brooks
Author:
Adam D. Galinsky
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