Results 241 to 250 of about 42,215 (293)

Mortality Salience Replication Manuscript

2021
Materials and data from TMT replication ...
Treger, Stan, Benau, Erik
openaire   +1 more source

A Distant Ally?: Mortality Salience and Parasocial Attachment

OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying, 2022
Research in Terror Management Theory finds that close interpersonal relationships (e.g., parents, romantic partners) mitigate threat reactions to reminders of mortality. Parasocial relationships (imagined relationships with media personalities) afford many of the same benefits as interpersonal relationships.
Lucas A. Keefer   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Culturally Divergent Responses to Mortality Salience

Psychological Science, 2011
Two experiments compared the effects of death thoughts, or mortality salience, on European and Asian Americans. Research on terror management theory has demonstrated that in Western cultural groups, individuals typically employ self-protective strategies in the face of death-related thoughts.
Christine, Ma-Kellams, Jim, Blascovich
openaire   +2 more sources

Self-Regulation After Mortality Salience

European Psychologist, 2005
Abstract. This research investigates mortality salience (MS) and national pride in Germany, a country in which, for historical reasons, attitudes toward the nation are negatively valued. Within this cultural context, utilizing national pride as a coping strategy for dealing with MS may require well-developed self-regulatory abilities: It was ...
Miguel Kazén   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Oxytocin intensifies the mortality salience effect: Novel evidence for the social salience model of oxytocin

Hormones and Behavior, 2021
Oxytocin plays an important role in human responses to threat processing. Few studies have directly examined the effects of oxytocin on our response to death-related stimuli. In the current study, 63 participants intranasally received either 32 IU of oxytocin or a placebo and thereafter completed a visual dot-probe task consisting of death-related and ...
Jun, Chen   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Literature as Mortality Salience?

2015
The term ‘empathy’ is associated with positive values in western cultures: it is generally thought good if people feel empathetic, and children are standardly brought up to take feelings of other people into consideration. But what if empathy is distressful?
Chesnokova, Anna   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Mortality Salience in the Workplace

2020
Deaths in the workplace are stressful occurrences that can negatively impact the organization and its members. Therefore, the purpose of this chapter is to explain how employees’ encounters with death can influence their attitude, thoughts, and behavior through mortality salience.
Alexandra Jacobsen, Terry A. Beehr
openaire   +1 more source

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