Linking anger and disgust to motives and
anticipations of aggression in the East: testing
a socio-functional account of moral emotions in
Japan (2025)
Lei Fan, Catherine Molho, Florian van Leeuwen, Hirotaka Imada & Joshua M.
Tybur
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/02699931.2025.2572709
Abstract
Anger and disgust often underlie responses to social transgressions, yet their links to
aggressive punishments have been primarily studied in Western populations. Across
two studies sampling from Japan, we tested a socio-functional account of these two
other-condemning moral emotions, which predicts differential associations of anger
and disgust with direct versus indirect aggression. Study 1 (N = 1,231) revealed that
anger relates to motives to aggress both directly and indirectly, whereas disgust
relates only to motives to aggress indirectly. Study 2 (N = 930) extended these
findings by showing that people infer greater direct aggression from anger
expressions and greater indirect aggression from disgust expressions. These results
are largely the same as those previously observed in Western samples. Overall,
findings suggest that across culturally distinct populations, anger and disgust play
similar functional roles in regulating aggressive punishments.
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