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Positively versus negatively charged moral emotion expectancies in adolescence: The role of situational context and the developing moral self
45
Citations
24
References
2010
Year
Moral PhilosophySocial PsychologyMoral IssueEducationAdolescencePsychologySocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologyMoral NormMoral Emotion ExpectanciesBehavioral SciencesMoral DevelopmentAdolescent PsychologyApplied Social PsychologyAdolescent DevelopmentMoral PsychologyEmotion ExpectanciesProsocial BehaviorAdolescent CognitionDevelopmental ScienceSituational ContextMoral Self
The study analyses adolescents' positively charged versus negatively charged moral emotion expectancies. Two hundred and five students (M= 14.83 years, SD= 2.21) participated in an interview depicting various situations in which a moral norm was either regarded or transgressed. Emotion expectancies were assessed for specific emotions (pride, guilt) as well as for overall strength and valence. In addition, self-importance of moral values was measured by a questionnaire. Results revealed that positively charged emotion expectancies were more pronounced in contexts of prosocial action than in the context of moral transgressions, whereas the opposite was true for negatively charged emotions. At the same time, expectations of guilt and pride were substantially related to the self-importance of moral values.
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