If you have been trying to keep up with the Joneses, you are not
alone-it seems we are all wired that way. Researchers report that the
social emotions of envy and gloating are much stronger on every measure
than are the sentiments of relief and regret, which are felt privately.



A team led by economist Aldo Rustichini of the University of Minnesota
used skin conductance to measure volunteers` emotional arousal as they
played a lottery game either alone or with a partner. The investigators
found that the subjects` emotions of gloating and envy (as they compared
their winnings with those of a peer) were much stronger than their
emotions of relief and regret (as they played the lottery alone). The
social emotions seem to elicit more response from the orbitofrontal
cortex and the basal ganglia, brain regions involved in processing
reward according to preliminary data from the team's separate fMRI
study.



Gloating topped all other emotions in intensity. "There is more
emotional impact if you beat someone else," says Rustichini, who
carried out the study with neuroscientists Nadege Bault and Gioggio
Coricelli of the National Center for Scientific Research in France. The
root of our delight in bragging rights could be evolutionary, Rustichini
explains: Among animals, a higher position in ranking helps in
competition for food and mates, and humans may share some of this
concern."


Happy Learning,


Yovan P. Putra

www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>










Reply via email to