Envy: Functional specificity and sex-differentiated design features

► Envy is functionally-tuned in ways that are sex-specific. ► The advantages that elicit envy correspond to major classes of adaptive challenges. ► Envy is often directed at same-sex others with mating-relevant advantages. In two studies, we explore causal domains of envy and test predictions about...

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Veröffentlicht in:Personality and individual differences 2012-08, Vol.53 (3), p.317-322
Hauptverfasser: DelPriore, Danielle J., Hill, Sarah E., Buss, David M.
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Hill, Sarah E.
Buss, David M.
description ► Envy is functionally-tuned in ways that are sex-specific. ► The advantages that elicit envy correspond to major classes of adaptive challenges. ► Envy is often directed at same-sex others with mating-relevant advantages. In two studies, we explore causal domains of envy and test predictions about whether it is sex differentiated in nature. Study 1 explored the contexts in which envy is most frequently experienced by men and women. Study 2 built on these results, explicitly testing predictions about sex differences in envy. The results provide needed insight into sex differences in envy and provide the basis for a deeper understanding of the function served by this unpleasant emotion.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Affectivity. Emotion
Biological and medical sciences
Emotions
Envy
Evolutionary psychology
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Gender differences
Personality. Affectivity
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Sex differences
Unpleasant
title Envy: Functional specificity and sex-differentiated design features
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