Procedural justice effects on self-esteem under certainty versus uncertainty emotions |
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Authors: | David De Cremer Alain Van Hiel |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Social Psychology, Center of Justice and Social Decision Making (JuST), Tilburg University, P.O. Box 90153, 5000 LE Tilburg, The Netherlands;(2) Department of Developmental, Personality, and Social Psychology, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium |
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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. |
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Keywords: | Procedural justice Uncertainty Discrete emotions Self-esteem Certainty appraisals |
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