Threat, high self-esteem, and reactive approach-motivation: Electroencephalographic evidence |
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Authors: | Ian McGregor Kyle A. Nash |
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Affiliation: | a York University, 4700 Keele Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M3J 1P3 b University of Toronto Scarborough, 1265 Military Trail, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M1C 1A4 |
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Abstract: | High self-esteem predicts personal resilience but also predicts zealous and antisocial reactions to various threats, such as, failure, uncertainty, and mortality salience. The present research supports a basic motivational interpretation of high self-esteem that can account for its resilient but also its zealous and antisocial tendencies. An experimentally manipulated uncertainty threat caused participants with high self-esteem to react with heightened Relative Left Frontal (F7/F8) EEG Activity, a common neural marker of resilient approach-motivation. As predicted by past theorizing on offensive defensiveness (McGregor, 2006), the obtained pattern of neural results mirrors the interaction effect of self-esteem and threat on various antisocial defenses. It is accordingly suggested that reactive approach-motivation processes may help provide an integrative account for some of the angry, zealous, proud, risky, ideological, meaning-seeking, and worldview defense reactions to various threats that have been reported in the social psychological literature. |
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Keywords: | Self-esteem Uncertainty threat Extremism Antisocial behavior Approach-motivation Electroencephalography |
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