TY - JOUR
T1 - To Feel or Not to Feel When My Group Harms Others? The Regulation of Collective Guilt as Motivated Reasoning
AU - Sharvit, Keren
AU - Brambilla, Marco
AU - Babush, Maxim
AU - Colucci, Francesco Paolo
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2015, © 2015 by the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Inc.
PY - 2015/9/4
Y1 - 2015/9/4
N2 - Four studies tested the proposition that regulation of collective guilt in the face of harmful ingroup behavior involves motivated reasoning. Cognitive energetics theory suggests that motivated reasoning is a function of goal importance, mental resource availability, and task demands. Accordingly, three studies conducted in the United States and Israel demonstrated that high importance of avoiding collective guilt, represented by group identification (Studies 1 and 3) and conservative ideological orientation (Study 2), is negatively related to collective guilt, but only when mental resources are not depleted by cognitive load. The fourth study, conducted in Italy, demonstrated that when justifications for the ingroup’s harmful behavior are immediately available, the task of regulating collective guilt and shame becomes less demanding and less susceptible to resource depletion. By combining knowledge from the domains of motivated cognition, emotion regulation, and intergroup relations, these cross-cultural studies offer novel insights regarding factors underlying the regulation of collective guilt.
AB - Four studies tested the proposition that regulation of collective guilt in the face of harmful ingroup behavior involves motivated reasoning. Cognitive energetics theory suggests that motivated reasoning is a function of goal importance, mental resource availability, and task demands. Accordingly, three studies conducted in the United States and Israel demonstrated that high importance of avoiding collective guilt, represented by group identification (Studies 1 and 3) and conservative ideological orientation (Study 2), is negatively related to collective guilt, but only when mental resources are not depleted by cognitive load. The fourth study, conducted in Italy, demonstrated that when justifications for the ingroup’s harmful behavior are immediately available, the task of regulating collective guilt and shame becomes less demanding and less susceptible to resource depletion. By combining knowledge from the domains of motivated cognition, emotion regulation, and intergroup relations, these cross-cultural studies offer novel insights regarding factors underlying the regulation of collective guilt.
KW - collective guilt
KW - emotion regulation
KW - moral disengagement
KW - motivated reasoning
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84938327346&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1177/0146167215592843
DO - https://doi.org/10.1177/0146167215592843
M3 - Article
C2 - 26130597
SN - 0146-1672
VL - 41
SP - 1223
EP - 1235
JO - Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
JF - Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
IS - 9
ER -