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ArtikelAnticipated Guilt as Motivation to Help Unknown Others : An Examination of Empathy as a Moderator  
Oleh: Lindsey, Lisa L. Massi ; Yun, Kimo Ah ; Hill, Jennifer B.
Jenis: Article from Journal - ilmiah internasional
Dalam koleksi: Communication Research vol. 34 no. 4 (Aug. 2007), page 468-480.
Topik: empathy; guilt; perspective taking; empathic concern; persuasion
Fulltext: Vol 34, no 4, page 468-480.pdf (98.28KB)
Isi artikelPrevious research finds that messages that induce substantial perceptions of (a) an unknown-other directed threat, (b) response-efficacy, and (c) self-efficacy result in feelings of anticipated guilt that subsequently motivate behavioral intent, and ultimately, behaviors to avert the threat to unknown others. It is not clear, however, if certain individual differences make people more or less likely to experience anticipatory guilt. To this end, this study asks whether empathic concern and perspective taking moderates the relationship between exposure to such a message and anticipated guilt. This question is tested by focusing on the topic of bone marrow donation. Participants are assigned randomly to 1 of 3 message conditions and complete a questionnaire designed to assess perspective taking, empathic concern, and anticipated guilt. The data indicate that the message has a substantial direct effect on guilt anticipation, and neither a direct effect for the empathy dimensions nor an interaction effect between empathy and anticipated guilt are present.
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