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Paper Title

Rejection Elicits Emotional Reactions but Neither Causes Immediate Distress nor Lowers Self-Esteem: A Meta-Analytic Review of 192 Studies on Social Exclusion

Keywords

  • Social Rejection
  • Ostracism
  • Self-Esteem
  • Emotional Reactions
  • Affective Numbing
  • Social Exclusion
  • Meta-Analysis
  • Negative Emotional State
  • Belongingness Motivation
  • Sociometer Theory
  • Affect
  • Emotional State
  • Self-Esteem Defenses
  • Social Exclusion Effects
  • Mood Changes
  • Interpersonal Rejection

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 13 | Issue : 4 | Page No : 269-309

Published On

September, 2009

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Abstract

Competing predictions about the effect of social exclusion were tested by meta-analyzing findings from studies of interpersonal rejection, ostracism, and similar procedures. Rejection appears to cause a significant shift toward a more negative emotional state. Typically, however, the result was an emotionally neutral state marked by low levels of both positive and negative affect. Acceptance caused a slight increase in positive mood and a moderate increase in self-esteem. Self-esteem among rejected persons was no different from neutral controls. These findings are discussed in terms of belongingness motivation, sociometer theory, affective numbing, and self-esteem defenses.

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