This research tested the hypothesis that mindful-gratitude practice attenuates the robust association between collective narcissism and prejudice. In Study 1 (a between-subjects study using a nationally representative sample of 569 Polish adults; 313 female), 10 min of mindful-gratitude practice—compared to mindful-attention practice and control—did not decrease prejudice (anti-Semitism), but weakened the positive link between collective narcissism and prejudice. In Study 2 (a preregistered, randomized, controlled-trial study using a convenience sample of 219 Polish adults; 168 female), a 6-week mobile app supported training in daily mindful-gratitude practice decreased prejudice (anti-Semitism, sexism, homophobia, anti-immigrant sentiment) and its link with collective narcissism compared to a wait-list control. The hypothesis-consistent results emphasize the social relevance of mindful-gratitude practice, a time- and cost-effective intervention.
CITATION STYLE
Golec de Zavala, A., Keenan, O., Ziegler, M., Mazurkiewicz, M., Nalberczak-Skóra, M., Ciesielski, P., … Sedikides, C. (2024). Mindful-Gratitude Practice Reduces Prejudice at High Levels of Collective Narcissism. Psychological Science, 35(2), 137–149. https://doi.org/10.1177/09567976231220902
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