<departmental bulletin paper>
Cognitive and emotional responses to angered experiences from the perspective of narcissism

Creator
Language
Publisher
Date
Source Title
Vol
First Page
Last Page
Publication Type
Access Rights
JaLC DOI
Abstract This study investigated whether there were differences in people’s degree of recognition of angered experiences as ego threats, emotional reactions to such experiences, and the mechanism of processing... such experiences according to narcissistic tendencies and the narcissism four subtypes. University students (N = 155) completed a questionnaire and the results of the analysis showed that when subjected to angered experience, people with hypervigilant narcissism tend to feel anxiety, those with compound narcissism tend to feel both anger and anxiety, and those with oblivious narcissism and low levels of narcissism are less prone to anger and anxiety. In addition, it was also shown that those with compound narcissism tend to show other-responsible responses, and those with low levels of narcissism tend to show self-responsible responses. From these results, it is clear that evaluation hypersensitivity leads to high levels of anxiety and people have both evaluation sensitivity and the exaggeration are high feel anger. This perspective of narcissistic tendencies drawn from the reaction of young people to angered experiences, can help develop psychological support for adolescence.show more

Hide fulltext details.

pdf p001 pdf 1.16 MB 3,847  

Details

PISSN
NCID
Record ID
Subject Terms
Created Date 2020.03.16
Modified Date 2021.03.12

People who viewed this item also viewed