Artigo Revisado por pares

Differentiating Embarrassment and Shame

1994; Guilford Press; Volume: 13; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1521/jscp.1994.13.3.273

ISSN

1943-2771

Autores

Rowland S. Miller, June P. Tangney,

Tópico(s)

Language, Discourse, Communication Strategies

Resumo

Differentiating Embarrassment and ShameRowland S. Miller and June Price TangneyRowland S. Miller and June Price Tangney1 Sam Houston State University2 George Mason UniversityPublished Online:January 2011https://doi.org/10.1521/jscp.1994.13.3.273PDFPDF PLUS ShareShare onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack Citations About Previous article Next article FiguresReferencesRelatedDetails Cited byCited by1. Embarrassed by Calories: Joint Effect of Calorie Posting and Social ContextOnline publication date: 25 August 2022. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar2. Your Cheatin' Heart: How Emotional Intelligence and Selfishness Impact the Incidence of Consumer FraudOnline publication date: 13 August 2021. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar3. Need for distinction moderates customer responses to preferential treatmentOnline publication date: 16 March 2022. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar4. A Psychological Perspective on Vicarious Embarrassment and Shame in the Context of Cringe HumorOnline publication date: 8 October 2021. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar5. Good conversations: Grounding, convergence, and richnessOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar6. Thank you but no thank you: the impact of negative moral emotions on customer responses to preferential treatmentOnline publication date: 13 August 2021. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar7. Oops, I did it (again)! The emotional experience, interpersonal responses, and relational consequences of social gaffes in the workplaceOnline publication date: 8 July 2021. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar8. Situational Embarrassment and Its Relationship to Social Anxiety in Adults Who StutterOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar9. Negative emotions in consumer brand relationship: A review and future research agendaOnline publication date: 9 March 2021. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar10. Which emotions make you healthier? The effects of sadness, embarrassment, and construal level on healthy behaviorsOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar11. Internalized weight stigma and the relationship between weight perception and negative body-related self-conscious emotionsOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar12. Do You Care What Robots Think? – Embarrassing Encounters with Service RobotsOnline publication date: 1 July 2021. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar13. Dropping Out of School: Explaining How Concerns for the Family's Social-Image and Self-Image Predict AngerOnline publication date: 4 August 2020. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar14. The Comic StanceOnline publication date: 18 May 2020. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar15. Body-related embarrassment: The overlooked self-conscious emotionOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar16. Self-Focused Emotions and Ethical Decision-Making: Comparing the Effects of Regulated and Unregulated Guilt, Shame, and EmbarrassmentOnline publication date: 3 January 2019. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar17. A natureza evolutiva das emoções sociais básicas: uma investigação do orgulho e da vergonhaOnline publication date: 31 December 2019. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar18. Embarrassment Products, Web Personalization and Online Buying BehaviorOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar19. The Shame of It All: A Review of Shame in Organizational LifeOnline publication date: 23 January 2019. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar20. The Politics of Embarrassment: Considerations on How Norm-Transgressions of Political Representatives Shape Nation-Wide Communication of Emotions on Social MediaOnline publication date: 27 March 2019. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar21. Self-Conscious Emotions and FansOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar22. L'embarras, émotion ambivalente et complexe : une présentation théoriqueOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar23. Application of the COM-B model to barriers and facilitators to chlamydia testing in general practice for young people and primary care practitioners: a systematic reviewOnline publication date: 22 October 2018. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar24. Countering embarrassment-avoidance by taking an observer's perspectiveOnline publication date: 27 March 2018. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar25. Situation-specific emotional states: Testing Nesse and Ellsworth's (2009) model of emotions for situations that arise in goal pursuit using virtual world softwareOnline publication date: 15 March 2018. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar26. BibliographyOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar27. Online publication date: Go to citation Crossref 28. Shame as a compromise for humiliation and rage in the internal representation of abuse by loved ones: Processes, motivations, and the role of dissociationOnline publication date: 20 March 2017. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar29. The Exposed Self: A Multilevel Model of Shame and Ethical BehaviorOnline publication date: 3 May 2016. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar30. An Introduction to the Value of Shame—Exploring a Health Resource in Cultural ContextsOnline publication date: 8 April 2017. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar31. The phenomenology of shame in the clinical encounterOnline publication date: 24 June 2015. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar32. Children's understanding of embarrassment: Integrating mental time travel and mental state informationOnline publication date: 30 May 2015. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar33. Wetting the bed at twenty‐one: Embarrassment as a private emotionOnline publication date: 25 February 2015. Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarGentiana Sadikaj, D. S. Moskowitz, Jennifer J. Russell and David C. Zuroff34. Submissiveness in Social Anxiety Disorder: The Role of Interpersonal Perception and EmbarrassmentOnline publication date: 28 January 2015. Go to citation Crossref 35. It's not our fault! Explaining why families might blame the school for failure to complete a high-school educationOnline publication date: 20 August 2014. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar36. Differentiating Shame from EmbarrassmentOnline publication date: 24 April 2014. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar37. Embarrassment and Social Anxiety Disorder: Fraternal Twins or Distant Cousins?Online publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar38. Balancing the Basket: The Role of Shopping Basket Composition in EmbarrassmentOnline publication date: 1 December 2013. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar39. Cultural intimacy in International RelationsOnline publication date: 19 June 2012. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar40. Embarrassment and Social Organization: A Multiple Identities ModelOnline publication date: 30 June 2013. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar41. Nie Wieder: Group-Based Emotions for In-Group Wrongdoing Affect Attitudes toward Unrelated MinoritiesOnline publication date: 24 January 2013. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar42. Recalibrational Emotions and the Regulation of Trust-Based BehaviorsOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar43. A biosocial perspective on embarrassmentOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar44. Shame-prone gamblers and their coping with gambling lossOnline publication date: 1 October 2012. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar45. Shame-Proneness as a Risk Factor of Compulsive BuyingOnline publication date: 4 April 2012. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar46. Vicarious shameOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar47. It's Too Late to ApologizeOnline publication date: 29 September 2011. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar48. Disgust: the disease-avoidance emotion and its dysfunctionsOnline publication date: 12 December 2011. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar49. Concern for self-image and social image in the management of moral failure: Rethinking shameOnline publication date: 24 May 2011. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar50. Coping with guilt and shame in the impulse buying contextOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar51. Your Flaws Are My Pain: Linking Empathy To Vicarious EmbarrassmentOnline publication date: 13 April 2011. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar52. Affective and Behavioral Traces of Goal Conflict With Physical ActivityOnline publication date: 16 May 2011. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar53. Cultural Intimacy in International RelationsOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar54. EmotionOnline publication date: 30 June 2010. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar55. Exploring the Consequences of Humiliating a Moral TransgressorOnline publication date: 13 May 2010. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar56. The Injunctive and Descriptive Norms Governing EatingOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar57. Are Embarrassment and Social Anxiety Disorder Merely Distant Cousins, or Are They Closer Kin?Online publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar58. An Empathy-Helping Perspective on Consumers' Responses to Fund-Raising AppealsOnline publication date: 1 October 2008. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar59. The Relationship of Internalinzed Shame,Defense Style and Emotional ExpressivenessOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar60. Using controlled comparisons in disgust psychopathology research: The case of disgust, hypochondriasis and health anxietyOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar61. The Unwanted Exposure of the Self: A Phenomenological Study of Embarrassment.Online publication date: 1 January 2006. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar62. Online publication date: Go to citation Crossref 63. COMMENTARIES on: Why Emotion Names and Experiences Don't Neatly PairOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar64. Emotion as Adaptive Interpersonal CommunicationOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar65. Bullying at work: the impact of shame among university and college lecturersOnline publication date: 19 October 2010. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar66. COMMENTARIES on "Putting the Self Into Self-Conscious Emotions: A Theoretical Model"Online publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar67. Shame-proneness and achievement behaviourOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar68. Shame and guilt: characterological vs. behavioral self-blame and their relationship to fear of intimacyOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar69. Lesbian ShameOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar70. Shame in Self and SocietyOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar71. The regulatory function of self-conscious emotion: Insights from patients with orbitofrontal damage.Online publication date: 1 January 2003. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar72. Does the Test of Self-Conscious Affect (TOSCA) measure maladaptive aspects of guilt and adaptive aspects of shame? An empirical investigationOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar73. The role of public exposure in moral and nonmoral shame and guilt.Online publication date: 1 January 2002. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar74. Humour and EmbarrassmentOnline publication date: 29 June 2016. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar75. Examining relations between shame and personality among university students in the United States and Japan: A developmental perspectiveOnline publication date: 30 June 2016. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar76. Commentaries on "The Really Fundamental Attribution Error in Social Psychological Research"Online publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar77. Shame and Embarrassment RevisitedOnline publication date: 2 July 2016. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar78. Clarifying the experience of shame: the role of attachment style, gender, and investment in relatednessOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar79. Emotion, Regulation, and Moral DevelopmentOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar80. Thinking/Feeling about Social and Personal RelationshipsOnline publication date: 30 June 2016. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar81. Shame and Rational Choice in Offending DecisionsOnline publication date: 30 June 2016. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar82. Appeasement in human emotion, social practice, and personalityOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar83. The Motivated Expression of Embarrassment Following a Self-Presentational PredicamentOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar84. Emotions and SentimentsOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar85. Moral EmotionsOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar Volume 13Issue 3Sep 1994 Information© 1994 Guilford Publications Inc.PDF download

Referência(s)