TY - JOUR
T1 - Cold-blooded loneliness: Social exclusion leads to lower finger temperatures.
AU - IJzerman, H
AU - Galluci, M
AU - Pouw, Wim
AU - Wei?gerber, S C
AU - Van Doesum, N J
PY - 2012
Y1 - 2012
N2 - Being ostracized or excluded, even brie?y and by strangers, is painful and threatens fundamental needs. Recent work by Zhong and Leonardelli (2008) found that excluded individuals perceive the room as cooler and that they desire warmer drinks. A perspective that many rely on in embodiment is the theoretical idea that people use metaphorical associations to understand social exclusion (see Landau, Meier, & Keefer, 2010). We suggest that people feel colder because they are colder. The results strongly support the idea that more complex metaphorical understand
ings of social relations are scaffolded onto literal changes in bodily temperature: Being excluded in an online ball tossing game leads to lower ?nger temperatures (Study 1), while the negative affect typically experienced after such social exclusion is alleviated after holding a cup of warm tea (Study 2). The authors discuss further implications for the interaction between body and social relations speci?cally, and for basic and cognitive systems in general.
AB - Being ostracized or excluded, even brie?y and by strangers, is painful and threatens fundamental needs. Recent work by Zhong and Leonardelli (2008) found that excluded individuals perceive the room as cooler and that they desire warmer drinks. A perspective that many rely on in embodiment is the theoretical idea that people use metaphorical associations to understand social exclusion (see Landau, Meier, & Keefer, 2010). We suggest that people feel colder because they are colder. The results strongly support the idea that more complex metaphorical understand
ings of social relations are scaffolded onto literal changes in bodily temperature: Being excluded in an online ball tossing game leads to lower ?nger temperatures (Study 1), while the negative affect typically experienced after such social exclusion is alleviated after holding a cup of warm tea (Study 2). The authors discuss further implications for the interaction between body and social relations speci?cally, and for basic and cognitive systems in general.
UR - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S000169181200073X
U2 - 10.1016/j.actpsy.2012.05.002
DO - 10.1016/j.actpsy.2012.05.002
M3 - Article
VL - 140
SP - 283
EP - 288
JO - Acta Psychologica
JF - Acta Psychologica
SN - 0001-6918
IS - 3
ER -