KUNDT, Radek. Rituals and Excitation Transfer: The Effects of Arousal on Social Behaviour & Religious Primes and Decision Making. In CERC Plenary meeting, Vancouver, 3-5 May 2013. 2013.
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Basic information
Original name Rituals and Excitation Transfer: The Effects of Arousal on Social Behaviour & Religious Primes and Decision Making
Authors KUNDT, Radek (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution).
Edition CERC Plenary meeting, Vancouver, 3-5 May 2013, 2013.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Presentations at conferences
Field of Study 60300 6.3 Philosophy, Ethics and Religion
Country of publisher Canada
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
RIV identification code RIV/00216224:14210/13:00068611
Organization unit Faculty of Arts
Keywords in English excitation transfer; religious ritual; social behaviour; religious priming; decision making; self-control
Tags rivok
Tags International impact, Reviewed
Changed by Changed by: Mgr. et Mgr. Radek Kundt, Ph.D., učo 42130. Changed: 21/11/2016 10:51.
Abstract
Many religious rituals involve highly arousing stimuli and literature suggests that arousal can alter (mainly amplify) various emotions. For example, it has been shown in laboratory settings that at the individual level arousal can produce residual excitement that serves to intensify later emotional states like aggression, sexual attraction or humour appreciation. Recent field studies, concentrating with greater ecological validity on the collective dimension of arousal, show that participants as well as spectators of religious rituals can share arousal to a great extent, and that highly arousing rituals can promote pro-social behaviour. However, it is yet to be established how arousal may influence prosociality and under what conditions arousal may produce pro-social effects. Here I discuss design of my recent study I conduct in controlled laboratory conditions in Brno, Czech Republic. The key research question addressed is whether (given the right prime) physiological arousal can influence social behaviour. More specifically, whether physiological arousal (given the right conditions for excitation transfer to occur) can result in increased pro-social or anti-social behaviour (given the right prime) My rationale is based on the Excitation transfer theory from previous psychological research which states that, if certain conditions are met, arousal elicited by one stimulus can be mistakenly attributed to another. I also present four religious priming and self-control studies we plan to run during August and September 2013 on different locations (Czech Republic, Slovak Republic, Germany and Mauritius). They include studies using contextual religious prime (or cross religious contextual primes) and combination of the delayed gratification task and random allocation game.
Links
EE2.3.20.0048, research and development projectName: Laboratoř pro experimentální výzkum náboženství
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