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Paper Title

Thwarting the Need to Belong: Understanding the Interpersonal and Inner Effects of Social Exclusion

Keywords

  • Social Exclusion
  • Need to Belong
  • Social Rejection
  • Interpersonal Effects
  • Aggressiveness
  • Helpfulness
  • Emotional Distress
  • Pain Sensitivity
  • Empathy
  • Self-regulation
  • Emotional Insensitivity
  • Social Exclusion Consequences
  • Interpersonal Behavior
  • Psychological Effects
  • Rejection Impacts

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 1 | Issue : 1 | Page No : 506-520

Published On

October, 2007

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Abstract

The need to belong is a powerful motivational basis for interpersonal behavior, and it is thwarted by social exclusion and rejection. Laboratory work has uncovered a destructive set of consequences of being socially excluded, such as increased aggressiveness and reduced helpfulness toward new targets. Rejected persons do, however, exhibit a cautious interest in finding new friends. Theory and intuition associate social exclusion with emotional distress, but laboratory research finds instead that the first response is a reduced sensitivity to pain and an emotional insensitivity that hampers empathy and may contribute to a variety of interpersonal behaviors. Self-regulation and intelligent thought are also impaired as a direct result of being rejected.

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