Motives matter: The psychological experience of ostracizing among sources
Rose Iannuzzelli, Karen Gonsalkorale, Lisa A. Williams

TL;DR
This study explores how different reasons for ostracizing others affect the emotions and behaviors of those who ostracize.
Contribution
The research introduces a novel paradigm to compare emotional and behavioral outcomes of punitive versus defensive ostracizing motives.
Findings
Ostracizing for defensive reasons is linked to higher guilt, fear, and anxiety compared to punitive reasons.
Punitive motives are associated with greater intentions to continue ostracizing and recruit others.
Guilt and anger mediate the impact of motive on future ostracizing intentions.
Abstract
Individuals ostracize others for myriad reasons, yet the influence of those reasons on the psychological experience of ostracizing is yet unknown. Two studies aimed to determine the emotional and behavioral sequelae of ostracizing for different motives, directly comparing punitive to defensive motives. We focused our examination on a suite of emotions expected to arise as a function of (1) the situations that give rise to ostracizing for punitive and defensive reasons (anger, fear, anxiety, and sadness) and (2) the act of ostracizing itself (i.e., pride and guilt). The research employed a novel paradigm to induce the experience of ostracizing for defensive or punitive motives. Study 1 (N = 372) investigated sources’ experienced emotion as a function of motive. Study 2 (N = 743) expanded consideration to behavioral intentions, including intentions to continue ostracizing and to recruit…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDeath Anxiety and Social Exclusion · Psychology of Moral and Emotional Judgment · Crime, Deviance, and Social Control
