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Journal Article

Citation

Kashdan TB, Dewall CN, Pond RS, Silvia PJ, Lambert NM, Fincham FD, Savostyanova AA, Keller PS. J. Pers. 2013; 81(1): 87-102.

Affiliation

George Mason University.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/j.1467-6494.2012.00783.x

PMID

22329537

Abstract

Objective. Curiosity is the propensity to recognize and seek out new information and experience, including an intrinsic interest in learning and developing one's knowledge. With few exceptions, researchers have often ignored the social consequences of being curious. Method. In four studies using cross-sectional (n = 64), daily-diary (ns = 150 and 110, respectively), and behavioral experimental (n = 132) designs, we tested the hypothesis that individual differences in curiosity are linked to less aggression, even when people are provoked. Results. We showed that both trait and daily curiosity were linked to less aggressive responses toward romantic relationship partners and people who caused psychological hurt. In time-lagged analyses, daily curiosity predicted less aggression from one day to the next, with no evidence for the reverse direction. Studies 3 and 4 showed that the inverse association between curiosity and aggression was strongest in close relationships and in fledgling (as opposed to long-lasting) romantic relationships. That is, highly curious people showed evidence of greater context sensitivity. Intensity of hurt feelings and other personality and relationship variables failed to account for these effects. Conclusions. Curiosity is a neglected mechanism of resilience in understanding aggression.


Language: en

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