Volume 46, Issue 1 p. 205-224

Replenishing connectedness: Reminders of social activity reduce aggression after social exclusion

Jean M. Twenge

Corresponding Author

Jean M. Twenge

San Diego State University, USA

Correspondence should be addressed to Jean M. Twenge, Department of Psychology, San Diego State University, 5500 Campanile Drive, San Diego, CA (e-mail: [email protected].).Search for more papers by this author
Liqing Zhang

Liqing Zhang

Beijing University, PR China

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Kathleen R. Catanese

Kathleen R. Catanese

Cleveland Community College, USA

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Brenda Dolan-Pascoe

Brenda Dolan-Pascoe

San Diego State University, USA

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Leif F. Lyche

Leif F. Lyche

University of Kansas, USA

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Roy F. Baumeister

Roy F. Baumeister

Florida State University, USA

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First published: 10 January 2011
Citations: 93

Abstract

Previous research found that social rejection leads to increased aggression. How can this aggressive behaviour be prevented? Four experiments demonstrate that reminders of social activity reduce aggression after social exclusion. A brief, friendly social connection with an experimenter (versus a neutral interaction) reduced aggression after social rejection. A traditional mood induction had no effect on aggressive behaviour, showing that an activity must be social to be effective. Participants who wrote about a family member, a friend or a favourite celebrity were also not aggressive after rejection. The effect was mediated by trust in other people but not by state self-esteem or mood. Rejected participants who have an alternative source of social connection eschew the increased aggression usually displayed after social exclusion.