Abstract

Previous behavioral and neural studies have shown the effects of malicious envy on schadenfreude. However, it is unclear whether these effects are modulated by contextual frames (e.g., gain and loss frames). Thus, the present study aimed to investigate whether behavioral and event-related potential (ERP) effects of malicious envy on schadenfreude were different in gain and loss frames. To address this issue, the participants in the present study believed they were playing a monetary game with several other players. In the malicious envy condition, the participants won less money than the player in the gain frame and lost more money in the loss frame; in the control condition, both participants and the player gained little money in the gain frame and lost much in the loss frame. Subsequently, the participants were informed that the player encountered a misfortune, i.e., gained little in the gain frame and lost much in the loss frame. Results showed that malicious envy increased feelings of schadenfreude and ERP responses when the player encountered a misfortune. Moreover, increased ERP responses by malicious envy occurred at the feedback-related negativity (FRN), and early late positive potential (LPP) time ranges in the gain frame but at the late LPP time range in the loss frame. The findings might suggest that malicious envy affects schadenfreude and corresponding neural activity, whereas the neural effects occur at comparatively early time ranges in the gain frame but at a later time range in the loss frame.

Highlights

  • Envy is a social-comparison-based emotion that arises when we compare ourselves unfavorably with superior quality, achievement, or possessions of another (Parrott and Smith, 1993)

  • The ratings were higher in the experimental condition than in the control condition and in the loss frame than in the gain frame

  • Ratings on Pleasure (Schadenfreude) The results showed that feelings of pleasure were stronger in the experimental condition than in the control condition [F(1,31) = 4.73, p = 0.037, η2p = 0.13]

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Summary

Introduction

Envy is a social-comparison-based emotion that arises when we compare ourselves unfavorably with superior quality, achievement, or possessions of another (Parrott and Smith, 1993). Neural studies often require multiple trials to reduce artifacts If such a task is used, participants have to imagine/describe a large number of enviable persons or the same person for multiple times. Imagining/describing a large number of persons is difficult for the participants, and multiple repetitions will reduce the strength of the effect

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