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Shame, Guilt, and Anger: Their Cognitive, Physiological, and Behavioral Correlates

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Abstract

Within the framework of the Component Process Model, the present study focuses on the emotions of shame, guilt, and anger, and aims at exploring their cognitive, physiological, and behavioral correlates. The participants were 124 Italian undergraduate students, who were asked to report an episode, from their autobiographical memory, about a self-conscious emotion that had occurred to them in the recent past. After that, they were asked to rate a large number of possible reactions about thoughts, bodily sensations, and action tendencies that they experienced during that episode. Our results generally support the idea that shame, guilt, and anger elicit different cognitive, physical, and behavioral patterns. These reactive systems may influence emotional and social adjustment in young adults. In particular, shame did not appear to be associated with aggressive tendencies, but it was characterized by the sensation of being a failure, gaze aversion, and by a low awareness of hurting and transgressing. Both guilt and anger were characterized by norm violation, whereas guilt alone was related to a tendency to repair.

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Acknowledgments

The comments of Mia Silfver, University of Helsinki (FI), and two anonymous reviewers on earlier versions of this paper are much appreciated.

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Correspondence to Monica Pivetti.

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Pivetti, M., Camodeca, M. & Rapino, M. Shame, Guilt, and Anger: Their Cognitive, Physiological, and Behavioral Correlates. Curr Psychol 35, 690–699 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12144-015-9339-5

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