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A central question of human psychology is whether and when people change for the better. Although it has long been assumed that emotion plays a central role in self-regulation, the role of specific emotions in motivating a desire for self-change has been largely ignored. We report 2 studies examining people's lived experiences of self-conscious emotions, particularly shame, in motivating a desire for self-change. Study 1 revealed that when participants recalled experiences of shame, guilt, or embarrassment, shame-and, to some degree, guilt-predicted a motivation for self-change. Study 2 compared shame, guilt, and regret for events and found that although shame experiences often involved high levels of both regret and guilt, it was feelings of shame that uniquely predicted a desire for self-change, whereas regret predicted an interest in mentally undoing the past and repairing harm done. Implications for motivating behavior change are discussed.
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Brian Lickel
Kostadin Kushlev
Victoria Savalei
Emotion
University of British Columbia
University of Massachusetts Boston
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Lickel et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a08700b1e8b9db648de0a09 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1037/a0038235