Perceptions of Emotional Functionality: Similarities and Differences Among Dignity, Face, and Honor Cultures

Author:

Maitner Angela T.1ORCID,DeCoster Jamie2ORCID,Andersson Per A.3ORCID,Eriksson Kimmo45ORCID,Sherbaji Sara16ORCID,Giner-Sorolla Roger7,Mackie Diane M.8,Aveyard Mark19,Claypool Heather M.109,Crisp Richard J.119,Gritskov Vladimir129ORCID,Habjan Kristina11139ORCID,Hartanto Andree149,Kiyonari Toko159ORCID,Kuzminska Anna O.169ORCID,Manesi Zoi149,Molho Catherine17189ORCID,Munasinghe Anudhi89,Peperkoorn Leonard S.179,Shiramizu Victor1920219ORCID,Smallman Rachel229ORCID,Soboleva Natalia239,Stivers Adam W.249ORCID,Summerville Amy10259,Wu Baopei269,Wu Junhui2728299ORCID

Affiliation:

1. American University of Sharjah, United Arab Emirates

2. University of Virginia, Charlottesville, USA

3. Linköping University, Sweden

4. Stockholm University, Sweden

5. Institute for Futures Studies, Stockholm, Sweden

6. University College London, UK

7. University of Kent, Canterbury, UK

8. University of California, Santa Barbara, USA

9. These authors have contributed equally and are listed alphabetically

10. Miami University, Oxford, OH, USA

11. Durham University, UK

12. Saint Petersburg State University, Russian Federation

13. University of Fribourg, Switzerland

14. Singapore Management University, Singapore

15. Aoyama Gakuin University, Kanagawa, Japan

16. University of Warsaw, Poland

17. Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands

18. Institute for Advanced Study in Toulouse, France

19. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Brazil

20. University of Glasgow, UK

21. University of Strathclyde, UK

22. Texas A&M University, College Station, USA

23. National Research University Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russian Federation

24. Gonzaga University, Spokane, WA, USA

25. Kairos Research, Dayton, OH, USA

26. Beijing Forestry University, China

27. Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China

28. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China

29. Beijing Normal University, China

Abstract

Emotions are linked to wide sets of action tendencies, and it can be difficult to predict which specific action tendency will be motivated or indulged in response to individual experiences of emotion. Building on a functional perspective of emotion, we investigate whether anger and shame connect to different behavioral intentions in dignity, face, and honor cultures. Using simple animations that showed perpetrators taking resources from victims, we conducted two studies across eleven countries investigating the extent to which participants expected victims to feel anger and shame, how they thought victims should respond to such violations, and how expectations of emotions were affected by enacted behavior. Across cultures, anger was associated with desires to reclaim resources or alert others to the violation. In face and honor cultures, but not dignity cultures, shame was associated with the desire for aggressive retaliation. However, we found that when victims indulged motivationally-relevant behavior, expected anger and shame were reduced, and satisfaction increased, in similar ways across cultures. Results suggest similarities and differences in expectations of how emotions functionally elicit behavioral responses across cultures.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Anthropology,Cultural Studies,Social Psychology

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