We have more control over how other people influence our emotions than previously realized, report researchers.
In a new study, psychologists examined why some people respond differently to an upsetting situation and learned that people’s motivations play an important role in how they react. The researchers found that when a person wanted to stay calm, they remained relatively unfazed by angry people, but if they wanted to feel angry, angry people highly influenced them.
The researchers also discovered that people who wanted to feel angry also got more emotional when they learned that other people were just as upset as they were, according to the results from a series of laboratory experiments the researchers conducted.
“We have long known that people often try to regulate their emotions when they believe that they are unhelpful,” says James Gross, a professor of psychology at Stanford University. “This set of studies extends this insight by showing that people can also regulate the way they are influenced by others’ emotions.”
Gauging reactions
To learn how people react to upsetting situations and respond to others around them, the researchers examined people’s anger toward politically charged events in a series of laboratory studies with 107 participants. The team also analyzed almost 19 million tweets in response to the police shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri in 2014.
In the laboratory studies, the researchers showed participants images that could trigger upsetting emotions, for example, people burning the American flag and American soldiers abusing prisoners in Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. The researchers also told participants how other people felt about these images.
The researchers found that participants who wanted to feel less angry were three times more likely to be more influenced by people expressing calm emotions than by angry people. But participants who wanted to feel angry were also three times more likely to be influenced by other people angrier than them, as opposed to people with calmer emotions. The researchers also found that these participants got more emotional when they learned that others also felt similar emotions to them.
“The degree to which people says they were motivated to feel or not feel certain emotions predicted how much they would be influenced when they were exposed to emotions from other group members,” says lead author Amit Goldenberg, a doctoral candidate in psychology.
Social media feelings
The researchers also looked at social media where they could see how emotions played out in real time. They focused on the unrest that emerged on Twitter following the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri in 2014.
After analyzing almost 19 million Twitter posts, the researchers found that Twitter users were more influenced by stronger emotions expressed by people in their social network compared to weaker and calmer reactions. They also found that when Twitter users responded to tweets that were similar in emotional intensity to their earlier reactions, the users amplified their emotions to express stronger outrage than others in their social network.
“The social dimension of emotions, particularly in response to sociopolitical events, is becoming increasingly important with the use of social media and people’s constant exposure to the emotions of others in online platforms,” write the study’s authors.
Using our emotions
Researchers have largely assumed that people’s emotions get influenced automatically—in an unconscious, immediate response to other people’s emotions, says Goldenberg. His team’s new research challenges that perspective, he says.
“Our emotions are not passive nor automatic,” Goldenberg says. “They are a little bit of a tool. We have the ability to use our emotions to achieve certain goals. We express certain emotions to convince other people to join our collective cause. On social media, we use emotions to signal to other people that we care about the issues of a group to make sure people know we’re a part of it.”
Further research needs to be done in order to understand the relationship between people and their emotions. One of the next topics Goldenberg says he wants to examine further is whether the desire of people to want to see and experience certain emotions around them lies at the core of how they choose their network of friends and other people around them.
“It seems that the best way to regulate your emotions is to start with the selection of your environment,” Goldenberg says.
“If you don’t want to be angry today, one way to do that is to avoid angry people. Do some people have an ingrained preference for stronger emotions than others? That’s one of my next questions.”
Their findings appear in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: General.
Source: Stanford University