by SHANKAR VEDANTAM NPR Morning Edition
April 01, 2013 3:16 AM
To err is human.
So is refusing to apologize for
those errors.
From toddlers and talk show hosts
to pre-teens and presidents,
we all know people who have done stupid, silly and evil things then square
their jaw and tell the world they've done nothing wrong.
Parents, educators and even
public relations flacks have talked at length about the value of coming clean,
and there is abundant research on the psychological value of apologizing. But psychologists
recently decided to take a new tack: If so many
people don't like to do it, there must be psychological value in not
apologizing, too.
In a recent paper,
researchers Tyler G. Okimoto, Michael Wenzel and Kyli Hedrick reported on what
they've found happens in people's minds when they refuse to apologize. They
find that parents who tell their kids that saying sorry will make them feel
better have been telling the kids the truth — but not the whole truth.
"We do find that apologies
do make apologizers feel better, but the interesting thing is that refusals to
apologize also make people feel better and, in fact, in some cases it makes
them feel better than an apology would have," Okimoto said in an
interview.
Okimoto surveyed 228 Americans
and asked them to remember a time they had done something wrong. Most people
remembered relatively trivial offenses, but some remembered serious offenses,
including crimes such as theft.
The researchers then asked the
people whether they had apologized or made a decision not to apologize, even
though they knew they were in the wrong. And they also divided the people at
random and asked some to compose an email where they apologized for their
actions, or compose an email refusing to apologize.
In both cases, Okimoto said, refusing to apologize provided psychological benefits
— which explain why people are so often reluctant to apologize.
The same thing happened when
people were asked to imagine doing something wrong, and then imagine
apologizing or refusing to apologize.
"When you refuse to
apologize, it actually makes you feel more empowered," he said. "That
power and control seems to translate into greater feelings of self-worth."
Ironically, Okimoto said, people
who refused to apologize ended up with boosted feelings of integrity.
The researchers
are not suggesting that refusing to apologize is a useful life strategy: Okimoto himself said he has little trouble apologizing. The
interpersonal benefits of apologizing are huge, and an apology can not only
renew bonds between people, but between
countries.
Okimoto believes the research, in
fact, may provide a clue on how best to get people to apologize. Our
conventional approach, especially with kids, is to force people to apologize.
But if people are reluctant to apologize because apologies
make them feel threatened, coercion is unlikely to help – that is, if a
sincere apology is hoped for.
Support and love, by contrast,
may be a more effective way to counter the feelings of threat involved in an
apology.
The next time junior — or your
partner — does something wrong, pass on the stare and try a hug.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022103112002454
Volume
49, Issue 3, May 2013, Pages
315–324
The apology mismatch:
Asymmetries between victim's need for apologies and perpetrator's willingness
to apologize
Joost
M. Leunissena, , , David De Cremerb, Christopher P. Reinders
Folmerc, Marius van Dijkea
a Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University
Rotterdam, The Netherlands
b China Europe International Business School,
Hongfeng Road, Pudong, China
c Ghent University, Gent, Belgium
|
HiddenBrain
Guilt and anger (among perpetrators and victims) explain the asymmetries we see in apologies. http://t.co/sPy9kuUW8B #PW 3/27/13 12:02 PM |
Abstract
Although previous research on apologies has shown that apologies
can have many beneficial effects on victims' responses, the dyadic nature of
the apology process has largely been ignored. As a consequence, very little is
known about the congruence between perpetrators' willingness to apologize and
victims' willingness to receive an apology. In three experimental studies we
showed that victims mainly want to receive an apology after an intentional
transgression, whereas perpetrators want to offer an apology particularly after
an unintentional transgression. As expected, these divergent apologetic needs
among victims and perpetrators were mediated by unique emotions: guilt among
perpetrators and anger among victims. These results suggest that an apology
serves very different goals among victims and perpetrators, thus pointing at an
apology mismatch.
Highlights
► The present paper
investigated the congruity between victims' and perpetrators' need for
apologies ► A mismatch between victims' and perpetrators' need for apologies is
observed ► This mismatch is driven by the intentionality of the transgression ►
This effect was mediated by anger (victims) and guilt (perpetrators) ► This
mismatch has consequences for actual apology behavior and subsequent
forgiveness
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