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      Even the Downhearted may be Uplifted: Moral Elevation in the Daily Life of Clinically Depressed and Anxious Adults

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      Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology
      Guilford Publications

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          Most cited references33

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          Development of reliable and valid short forms of the marlowe-crowne social desirability scale

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            Witnessing excellence in action: the 'other-praising' emotions of elevation, gratitude, and admiration.

            People are often profoundly moved by the virtue or skill of others, yet psychology has little to say about the 'other-praising' family of emotions. Here we demonstrate that emotions such as elevation, gratitude, and admiration differ from more commonly studied forms of positive affect (joy and amusement) in many ways, and from each other in a few ways. The results of studies using recall, video induction, event-contingent diary, and letter-writing methods to induce other-praising emotions suggest that: elevation (a response to moral excellence) motivates prosocial and affiliative behavior, gratitude motivates improved relationships with benefactors, and admiration motivates self-improvement. Mediation analyses highlight the role of conscious emotion between appraisals and motivations. Discussion focuses on implications for emotion research, interpersonal relationships, and morality.
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              The CAD triad hypothesis: A mapping between three moral emotions (contempt, anger, disgust) and three moral codes (community, autonomy, divinity).

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology
                Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology
                Guilford Publications
                0736-7236
                September 2012
                September 2012
                : 31
                : 7
                : 707-728
                Article
                10.1521/jscp.2012.31.7.707
                cbccb93a-4280-4745-a1ed-eb2e10183bbb
                © 2012
                History

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