Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
931231 | International Journal of Psychophysiology | 2012 | 9 Pages |
We studied the somatovisceral response pattern of vicarious embarrassment for someone else's inappropriate condition. Participants (N = 54) were confronted with hand-drawn sketches depicting public situations and were instructed to rate the intensity of their vicarious embarrassment. The inappropriate condition varied according to the attribution of intentionality (absent/present) and awareness (absent/present). Irrespective of these attributions, participants reported stronger vicarious embarrassment in comparison to neutral situations. Across a set of eleven somatovisceral variables vicarious embarrassment elicited a pattern of increased autonomic activation which was modulated by the awareness of the protagonist about the ongoing norm violation. The somatovisceral response pattern matches previous findings for the first-person experience of embarrassment. Together, these results support the hypothesis that processes of perspective taking also mediate the vicarious experience of embarrassment.
► Another's public norm violations elicited vicarious embarrassment in the observer. ► Vicarious embarrassment was accompanied by increased autonomic activation. ► Physiological response patterns suggest similarities to first-person embarrassment. ► Protagonists' awareness about the norm violation resulted in stronger activation.