The Scrooge Effect Revisited: Mortality Salience Increases the Satisfaction Derived from Prosocial Behavior

Zaleskiewicz, T., Gasiorowska, A., & Kesebir, P., The Scrooge effect revisited: Mortality salience increases the satisfaction derived from prosocial behavior. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, Forthcoming

40 Pages Posted: 1 Apr 2015

See all articles by Tomasz Zaleskiewicz

Tomasz Zaleskiewicz

University of Social Sciences and Humanities

Agata Gasiorowska

University of Social Sciences and Humanities

Pelin Kesebir

University of Wisconsin - Madison - Center for Investigating Healthy Minds

Date Written: March 30, 2015

Abstract

According to terror management theory, people deal with the potential for anxiety that results from the knowledge of the inevitability of death by holding on to sources of value that exist within their cultural worldview. Acting prosocially is one such source of value, and previous research suggests that reminders of mortality increase the desire for prosociality. In three studies, we tested the hypothesis that mortality reminders would lead to more generous allocation of financial resources and to more satisfaction derived from acting generously. Using the dictator game (Study 1), the ultimatum game (Study 2), and a quasi-naturalistic giving situation (Study 3) we showed that participants reminded of their mortality were not only more generous, but also were more satisfied the more money they donated. Moreover, Study 3 demonstrated that people reminded of their mortality derived higher satisfaction from prosocial behavior and such behavior was associated with better suppression of death-related thoughts. We conclude that acting prosocially in the face of mortality thoughts effectively soothes death anxiety and in turn produces psychological satisfaction.

Suggested Citation

Zaleskiewicz, Tomasz and Gasiorowska, Agata and Kesebir, Pelin, The Scrooge Effect Revisited: Mortality Salience Increases the Satisfaction Derived from Prosocial Behavior (March 30, 2015). Zaleskiewicz, T., Gasiorowska, A., & Kesebir, P., The Scrooge effect revisited: Mortality salience increases the satisfaction derived from prosocial behavior. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, Forthcoming , Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2587411

Tomasz Zaleskiewicz (Contact Author)

University of Social Sciences and Humanities ( email )

Warsaw
Poland

Agata Gasiorowska

University of Social Sciences and Humanities ( email )

Warsaw
Poland

Pelin Kesebir

University of Wisconsin - Madison - Center for Investigating Healthy Minds ( email )

1500 Highland Avenue, Suite S119
Waisman Center
Madison, WI 53705-2280
United States

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