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Awe and Positive Affect: the Role of Self-Transcendence and Self-Focused Attention

Autumn Chall

March 20, 2023 DOI: 10.30707/etd2023.20230711063200915772.999990 via OpenAlex

Summary

Awe experiences can enhance positive feelings by promoting self-transcendence while reducing self-focused attention. In a study with 431 college students, participants who wrote about awe felt significantly more awe and reported increased positive affect compared to those writing about neutral topics. The findings support the idea that self-transcendence mediates the relationship between awe and improved affect, highlighting the potential therapeutic benefits of writing about awe.

Study at a glance

Design between-subjects design
Sample size 431
Population college students from the Department of Psychology, aged at least 18 years old
Key finding Self-transcendence was supported as a mechanism by which awe improves positive affect.

Abstract

The present study discussed the mechanism behind awe’s ability to improve affect. Proposed mechanisms include a lowered level of self-focused attention and a heightened level of self-transcendence since awe experiences have been found to decrease self-interest and significance (Bai et al., 2017; T. Jiang & Sedikides, 2021). To examine self-focused attention and self-transcendence as potential mediators for the relationship between awe and positive affect, this study utilized therapeutic writing techniques. In a between-subjects design, participants were randomly assigned to write about either a personal experience of awe or a neutral experience. Following this, participants filled out questionnaires assessing affect, level of awe induced, self-focused attention, and self-transcendence. Ultimately, 431 participants (college student from the Department of Psychology) of at least 18 years old were included. Half of the proposed mediation model was supported—only the path from condition to self-transcendent experience to positive affect was significant. This provides support for self-transcendence as a mechanism by which awe improves affect. Additionally, the awe recall writing intervention did relate to significantly greater feelings of awe than the neutral writing intervention, indicating that writing about awe may be an effective method of inducing it. This study addressed the mechanism by which awe has therapeutic effects in an effort to (a) increase knowledge of awe in general, (b) increase knowledge of what makes certain experiential alternatives to talk therapy effective, and (c) assess the effectiveness of writing about awe experiences as a more direct method of accessing the benefits of awe. KEYWORDS: Awe; self-focused attention; self-transcendence; positive affect; well-being.

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