{"title":"人际情境中自恋对调节过程的影响。","authors":"Elizabeth A Edershile, Aidan G C Wright","doi":"10.1037/per0000693","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>The current study examines how narcissism is associated with (dys)regulation and the corresponding interpersonal situations likely to set the dynamic (dys)regulatory processes in motion. To replicate and extend findings from Wright et al., 2017, we examined, in four samples with preregistered analyses (total person: N = 1,022; total observation: n = 35,975), whether narcissism amplifies the link between perceptions of the interacting partner's behavior and one's own negative emotions. Results were somewhat variable across samples and measures of narcissism. The most consistent findings showed that narcissism amplified the link between perceiving the interacting partner as dominant and one's own negative affect (partial replication of Wright et al., 2017). We also found that narcissism amplified the link between perceiving the interacting partner as cold and one's own negative affect. Both narcissistic grandiosity and vulnerability played a role in these findings, but when controlling for the shared variance in each, it was narcissistic vulnerability that played a unique role in these effects. These results suggest that people who are perceived as interpersonally dominant and/or cold pose a threat to narcissistic goals and that such a threat is likely to lead to increases in negative affect for people high in narcissism (particularly people high in narcissistic vulnerability). Points of convergence and divergence with findings from Wright et al. (2017) are discussed as are similarities and differences across samples within the study. The current study elucidates important future directions for examining the social contexts likely to lead to dysregulation in individuals high in narcissism. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).</p>","PeriodicalId":74420,"journal":{"name":"Personality disorders","volume":"16 3","pages":"235-248"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2025-05-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Narcissism's effect on regulatory processes in interpersonal situations.\",\"authors\":\"Elizabeth A Edershile, Aidan G C Wright\",\"doi\":\"10.1037/per0000693\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>The current study examines how narcissism is associated with (dys)regulation and the corresponding interpersonal situations likely to set the dynamic (dys)regulatory processes in motion. To replicate and extend findings from Wright et al., 2017, we examined, in four samples with preregistered analyses (total person: N = 1,022; total observation: n = 35,975), whether narcissism amplifies the link between perceptions of the interacting partner's behavior and one's own negative emotions. Results were somewhat variable across samples and measures of narcissism. The most consistent findings showed that narcissism amplified the link between perceiving the interacting partner as dominant and one's own negative affect (partial replication of Wright et al., 2017). We also found that narcissism amplified the link between perceiving the interacting partner as cold and one's own negative affect. Both narcissistic grandiosity and vulnerability played a role in these findings, but when controlling for the shared variance in each, it was narcissistic vulnerability that played a unique role in these effects. These results suggest that people who are perceived as interpersonally dominant and/or cold pose a threat to narcissistic goals and that such a threat is likely to lead to increases in negative affect for people high in narcissism (particularly people high in narcissistic vulnerability). Points of convergence and divergence with findings from Wright et al. (2017) are discussed as are similarities and differences across samples within the study. The current study elucidates important future directions for examining the social contexts likely to lead to dysregulation in individuals high in narcissism. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
目前的研究探讨了自恋与调节的关系,以及相应的人际关系可能会启动动态调节过程。为了复制和扩展Wright等人2017年的研究结果,我们在四个样本中进行了检查,并进行了预注册分析(总人数:N = 1,022;总观察:n = 35,975),是否自恋放大了对互动伴侣行为的感知与自己的负面情绪之间的联系。不同样本和自恋程度的测量结果有些不同。最一致的发现表明,自恋放大了将互动伴侣视为主导与自己的负面影响之间的联系(Wright等人,2017年的部分重复)。我们还发现,自恋放大了认为互动伙伴冷漠和自己负面情绪之间的联系。自恋的浮夸和脆弱都在这些发现中发挥了作用,但当控制了两者的共同方差时,自恋的脆弱在这些影响中发挥了独特的作用。这些结果表明,被视为人际主导和/或冷漠的人对自恋目标构成了威胁,这种威胁可能会导致自恋程度高的人(尤其是自恋脆弱性高的人)的负面影响增加。本文讨论了Wright等人(2017)研究结果的趋同点和分歧点,以及研究中各样本的异同点。目前的研究阐明了研究可能导致高度自恋个体失调的社会环境的重要未来方向。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA,版权所有)。
Narcissism's effect on regulatory processes in interpersonal situations.
The current study examines how narcissism is associated with (dys)regulation and the corresponding interpersonal situations likely to set the dynamic (dys)regulatory processes in motion. To replicate and extend findings from Wright et al., 2017, we examined, in four samples with preregistered analyses (total person: N = 1,022; total observation: n = 35,975), whether narcissism amplifies the link between perceptions of the interacting partner's behavior and one's own negative emotions. Results were somewhat variable across samples and measures of narcissism. The most consistent findings showed that narcissism amplified the link between perceiving the interacting partner as dominant and one's own negative affect (partial replication of Wright et al., 2017). We also found that narcissism amplified the link between perceiving the interacting partner as cold and one's own negative affect. Both narcissistic grandiosity and vulnerability played a role in these findings, but when controlling for the shared variance in each, it was narcissistic vulnerability that played a unique role in these effects. These results suggest that people who are perceived as interpersonally dominant and/or cold pose a threat to narcissistic goals and that such a threat is likely to lead to increases in negative affect for people high in narcissism (particularly people high in narcissistic vulnerability). Points of convergence and divergence with findings from Wright et al. (2017) are discussed as are similarities and differences across samples within the study. The current study elucidates important future directions for examining the social contexts likely to lead to dysregulation in individuals high in narcissism. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).