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Journal Article

Citation

Mitschke V, Eder AB. Psychophysiology 2021; 58(8): e13835.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Society for Psychophysiological Research, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/psyp.13835

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

The suffering of an opponent is an important social affective cue that modulates how aggressive interactions progress. To investigate the affective consequences of opponent suffering on a revenge seeking individual, two experiments (total N = 82) recorded facial muscle activity while participants observed the reaction of a provoking opponent to a (retaliatory) sound punishment in a laboratory aggression task. Opponents reacted via prerecorded videos either with facial displays of pain, sadness, or neutrality.

RESULTS indicate that participants enjoyed seeing the provocateur suffer: indexed by a coordinated muscle response featuring an increase in zygomaticus major (and orbicularis oculi muscle) activation accompanied by a decrease in corrugator supercilii activation. This positive facial reaction was only shown while a provoking opponent expressed pain. Expressions of sadness, and administration of sound blasts to nonprovoking opponents, did not modulate facial activity. Overall, the results suggest that revenge-seeking individuals enjoy observing the offender suffer, which could represent schadenfreude or satisfaction of having succeeded in the retaliation goal.


Language: en

Keywords

revenge; facial electromyography; facial expression; reactive aggression; suffering

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