2016/08/28

Empathic embarrassment

Empathic embarrassment 
     : Situational and personal determinants of reactions to the embarrassment of another.
 
By Miller, Rowland S.
 
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Vol 53(6), Dec 1987, 1061-1069.
 
Abstract
Two experiments investigated the reactions of observers to actors' embarrassments. The first study manipulated the nature of the prior interaction between actor and observer (cooperative, competitive, or independent) and the observational set of the observer (empathic or nonempathic). The observers' self-reports and measures of their skin potentials indicated that an empathic set and any prior interaction generally increased their responsiveness to the actors' plight. Moreover, independent, empathic observers reported reactions that appear to be empathic embarrassment, embarrassment felt with another even though one's own social identity is not threatened. The second study showed that empathic embarrassment is strongest in subjects of high embarrassability who are chronically susceptible to embarrassment. The results portray social embarrassment as a robust, pervasive phenomenon that nevertheless affects some people more than others. The possible origins of empathic embarrassment and the joint influences of perception, interaction, and personality on the experience of empathic embarrassment are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)

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