The purpose of this study was to examine empathic embarrassment toward others of different psychological distances, and to compare those high on chronic susceptibility to embarrassment and those low. Participants were seventy-five female technical-college students. They completed a questionnaire that used six situations and four actors: oneself, family member, friend, and stranger. They indicated how much embarrassment they felt toward each actor in each situation. Results showed that empathic embarrassment occurred more frequently toward the person of close psychological distance, and those high on chronic susceptibility experienced empathic embarrassment more often.View full abstract
CITATION STYLE
Kuwamura, S. (2009). Empathic Embarrassment and Psychological Distance. The Japanese Journal of Personality, 17(3), 311–313. https://doi.org/10.2132/personality.17.311
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