Abstract

Envy is the painful or resentful awareness of another’s advantage combined with a desire to possess that same advantage. Recent neuroscientific research has begun to shed light on the brain regions that process the experience of envy, including regions of the prefrontal cortex involved in emotional processing and social cognition. It is still unclear, however, which regions of the brain are functionally connected during the experience of envy. We recorded functional neuroimaging data while inducing simulated envy in participants, experienced through a perspective-taking hypothetical scenario task. In this task, participants took the perspective of a protagonist portrayed in a written description and compared themselves to either i) a self-similar/superior individual, ii) a self-dissimilar/superior individual, or iii) a self-dissimilar/average individual. During each comparison, participants also reported how much envy they experienced while taking the protagonists perspective. We demonstrate an inverse relationship in the connectivity of the left superior frontal gyrus to both the right supramarginal gyrus and the precuneus with respect to self-reported envy ratings across participants. In other words, we show that the greater the functional connectivity that the left superior frontal gyrus shares with the right supramarginal gyrus and precuneus, the less reported envy a participant experiences. Overall, our results are in line with previous research implicating the superior frontal gyrus in the reappraisal of negative emotions and extend these findings by showing this region is also involved in modulating the simulated experience of the social comparative, negative emotion of envy.

Highlights

  • Social comparison involves individuals evaluating their own abilities and beliefs by comparing themselves to others (Festinger, 1954)

  • For the SpHi > AvLo contrast, we found significant changes in blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) signal in the left superior frontal gyrus, the right angular gyrus (46, −54, 40; max Z = 4.44) and the precuneus (−12, −60, 44; max Z = 3.34; Figure 3; Table 1)

  • Parameter estimates in the left superior frontal gyrus did not significantly correlate with the

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Summary

Introduction

Social comparison involves individuals evaluating their own abilities and beliefs by comparing themselves to others (Festinger, 1954). Along with the experience of an unpleasant emotional state, envy is associated with a host of undesirable behaviors. These include hostility and aggression toward the envied person (Smith & Kim, 2007), a willingness to sacrifice a positive outcome to reduce the envied person’s advantage (Berke, 1988; Parks, Rumble, & Posey, 2002; Zizzo & Oswald, 2016), and the experience of schadenfreude (joy at another’s misfortune) toward the envied person’s suffering (van de Ven et al, 2015), even if unjustified (Zizzo & Oswald, 2016). Positive outcomes related to envy have been reported, including motivating people to do better than their competitor (Protasi, 2016; van de Ven, Zeelenberg, & Pieters, 2009), by, for example, inspiring individuals to improve their position in the workplace (Schaubroeck & Lam, 2004)

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