Abstract
Individuals with grandiose narcissism exhibit enhanced antagonism and a defen-
sive pattern of discordance between their emotional and physiological reactions
to self- threatening evaluations. Although theoretical perspectives link narcissistic defensiveness to negative emotions, empirical evidence linking grandiose narcissism to emotional reactivity remains mixed. The current study used self-reported affect, electrocardiography, and facial electromyography (fEMG) to examine whether people scoring high in grandiose narcissism show amplified physiological and self-reported emotional reactivity to negative social evaluation. Following two challenging cognitive tasks, participants received negative and neutral feedback in a face-to-face evaluation situation. Receiving negative feedback decreased self- reported positive affect and dominance, slowed heart rate, and amplified fEMG activity related to frowning and eye constriction. Although self-reported emotional reactions were unrelated to grandiose narcissism, fEMG activity associated with negative affect was significantly enhanced by grandiose narcissism.
In conclusion, individuals with higher levels of grandiose narcissism may not
be willing to report overt emotional reactivity to self-threatening feedback, but
physiological responses “beneath their thin skin” reveal amplified threat-related
facial muscle activity suggestive of a negative emotional state.
sive pattern of discordance between their emotional and physiological reactions
to self- threatening evaluations. Although theoretical perspectives link narcissistic defensiveness to negative emotions, empirical evidence linking grandiose narcissism to emotional reactivity remains mixed. The current study used self-reported affect, electrocardiography, and facial electromyography (fEMG) to examine whether people scoring high in grandiose narcissism show amplified physiological and self-reported emotional reactivity to negative social evaluation. Following two challenging cognitive tasks, participants received negative and neutral feedback in a face-to-face evaluation situation. Receiving negative feedback decreased self- reported positive affect and dominance, slowed heart rate, and amplified fEMG activity related to frowning and eye constriction. Although self-reported emotional reactions were unrelated to grandiose narcissism, fEMG activity associated with negative affect was significantly enhanced by grandiose narcissism.
In conclusion, individuals with higher levels of grandiose narcissism may not
be willing to report overt emotional reactivity to self-threatening feedback, but
physiological responses “beneath their thin skin” reveal amplified threat-related
facial muscle activity suggestive of a negative emotional state.
Original language | English |
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Article number | e14315 |
Journal | Psychophysiology |
Volume | 60 |
Issue number | 9 |
Number of pages | 19 |
ISSN | 0048-5772 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Sept 2023 |
MoE publication type | A1 Journal article-refereed |
Fields of Science
- Ecg
- Emg
- Emotion
- Facial expression
- Narcissism
- Negative feedback
- 515 Psychology