@article{oai:klc.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000149, author = {久﨑, 孝浩 and 高木, 春美}, journal = {紀要visio : research reports, Visio}, month = {Jul}, note = {The aim of this investigation was to examine how self-conscious emotions were related to anger-related processes in Japanese college students. A questionnaire about selfconscious emotions and responses to anger was completed by 186 Japanese college students. KA-JiKoKan-12 (Kikuchi & Arimitsu, 2006) measured proneness to feel interpersonal indebtedness, personal distress, shame, guilt, role taking, and empathic concern. ARI (Tangney, Wagner, Marschall & Gramzow, 1991) Japanese version represented four broad categories of anger-related processes : anger arousal, intentions, cognitive and behavioral responses to anger (including maladaptive behaviors, adaptive behaviors, escapist/diffusing responses, and cognitive reappraisals), and assessment of the likely long-term consequences of the anger episode. The results were as follows : (1)Proneness to feel interpersonal indebtedness or empathic concern was not correlated with anger arousal and any response to anger. (2) Students who were inclined to feel personal distress tended to cope or deal aggressively and maladaptively with anger arousal. (3)Those who were prone to shame were inclined to escape from the anger situations. (4)Those who were prone to guilt tended to cope or deal nonaggresively and adaptively with the anger arousal. (5)Proneness to role taking was positively related to cognitive reappraisals in such situations. We discussed how each of six self-conscious emotions functioned in anger-elicited events., The aim of this investigation was to examine how self-conscious emotions were related to anger-related processes in Japanese college students. A questionnaire about selfconscious emotions and responses to anger was completed by 186 Japanese college students. KA-JiKoKan-12 (Kikuchi & Arimitsu, 2006) measured proneness to feel interpersonal indebtedness, personal distress, shame, guilt, role taking, and empathic concern. ARI (Tangney, Wagner, Marschall & Gramzow, 1991) Japanese version represented four broad categories of anger-related processes : anger arousal, intentions, cognitive and behavioral responses to anger (including maladaptive behaviors, adaptive behaviors, escapist/diffusing responses, and cognitive reappraisals), and assessment of the likely long-term consequences of the anger episode. The results were as follows : (1)Proneness to feel interpersonal indebtedness or empathic concern was not correlated with anger arousal and any response to anger. (2) Students who were inclined to feel personal distress tended to cope or deal aggressively and maladaptively with anger arousal. (3)Those who were prone to shame were inclined to escape from the anger situations. (4)Those who were prone to guilt tended to cope or deal nonaggresively and adaptively with the anger arousal. (5)Proneness to role taking was positively related to cognitive reappraisals in such situations. We discussed how each of six self-conscious emotions functioned in anger-elicited events.}, pages = {9--23}, title = {大学生における自己意識的情動と怒りの関連性}, volume = {34}, year = {2006} }