Journal Article10.1016/j.jesp.2025.104839
Effects of awe on self-transcendence: A registered report study
ChenXiao Zhao,Marret K. Noordewier,Michiel van Elk +2 more
About: This article is published in Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. The article was published on 05 Nov 2025.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
References
Culture and the self: Implications for cognition, emotion, and motivation.
TL;DR: Theories of the self from both psychology and anthropology are integrated to define in detail the difference between a construal of self as independent and a construpal of the Self as interdependent as discussed by the authors, and these divergent construals should have specific consequences for cognition, emotion, and motivation.
Approaching awe, a moral, spiritual, and aesthetic emotion.
Dacher Keltner,Jonathan Haidt +1 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that two appraisals are central and are present in all clear cases of awe: perceived vastness, and a need for accommodation, defined as an inability to assimilate an experience into current mental structures.
1.6K
Attending to the Big Picture: Mood and Global Versus Local Processing of Visual Information
Karen Gasper,Gerald L. Clore +1 more
TL;DR: Two experiments employed image-based tasks to test the hypothesis that happier moods promote a greater focus on the forest and sadder moods a greaterfocus on the trees, based on the idea that in task situations, affective cues may be experienced as task-relevant information, which then influences global versus local attention.
1.1K
Two ways to the top: evidence that dominance and prestige are distinct yet viable avenues to social rank and influence.
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that Dominance and Prestige are distinct yet viable strategies for ascending the social hierarchy, consistent with evolutionary theory.
Psilocybin-assisted treatment for alcohol dependence: A proof-of-concept study
Michael P. Bogenschutz,Alyssa A. Forcehimes,Jessica Pommy,Claire E. Wilcox,Paulo Cesar Ribeiro Barbosa,Rick J. Strassman +5 more
TL;DR: A single-group proof-of-concept study to quantify acute effects of psilocybin in alcohol-dependent participants and to provide preliminary outcome and safety data, providing a strong rationale for controlled trials with larger samples to investigate efficacy and mechanisms.
958