Limits of symhedonia: the differential role of prior emotional attachment in sympathy and sympathetic joy |
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Authors: | Royzman Edward B Rozin Paul |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA. royzman@psych.upenn.edu |
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Abstract: | Seven studies tested the hypothesis that compared with sympathy symhedonia (sympathy for another's good fortune) is inherently more contingent on prior emotional attachment to its targets. As predicted, Studies 1-4 found that reported attachment was higher for past episodes of symhedonia than for those of sympathy and that recalled incidence of sympathy exceeded that of symhedonia when the target was a stranger. Study 5 showed that whereas symhedonia was significantly higher for high- versus low-attachment targets sympathy was not. Study 6 found that sympathy is more likely than symhedonia when a relationship is strained. Study 7 found that both sympathy and symhedonia are weaker for nonclose (vs. close) others, but the disparity is significantly smaller for sympathy than for symhedonia. |
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