Watching Your Troubles Away: Television Viewing as a Stimulus for Subjective Self-Awareness

Three studies explored the role of television viewing in eliciting subjective self-awareness and positive self-feelings. Study 1 assessed the effects of self-awareness manipulations via exposure to a neutral television program on actual-ideal discrepancies. Those who watched television showed significantly smaller self-discrepancies than those who did not, independent of mood. Study 2 demonstrated the ecological validity of this finding by replicating it with people watching television in their own homes. Study 3 investigated whether manipulations of self-feelings affected television watching. Results indicated that those who received failure feedback watched television longer than those in a control condition who likewise watched television longer than those who received success feedback. Television appears to be an effective stimulus to direct the focus away from oneself and to render people less aware of how they are falling short of their standards.

[1]  Betty Kirkpatrick,et al.  Roget's Thesaurus , 1852 .

[2]  S. Mednick The associative basis of the creative process. , 1962, Psychological review.

[3]  S. Duval,et al.  A theory of objective self awareness , 1972 .

[4]  D. Zillmann,et al.  Motivated aggressiveness perpetuated by exposure to aggressive films and reduced by exposure to nonaggressive films , 1973 .

[5]  M. D. Storms,et al.  Videotape and the attribution process: reversing actors' and observers' points of view. , 1973, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[6]  W. Ickes,et al.  Objective self awareness and self esteem , 1973 .

[7]  Deborah Davis,et al.  Use of first person pronouns as a function of increased objective self-awareness and performance feedback , 1975 .

[8]  M. Scheier,et al.  Public and private self-consciousness: Assessment and theory. , 1975 .

[9]  F. Gibbons,et al.  Selective exposure to self , 1976 .

[10]  R. Cialdini,et al.  Basking in Reflected Glory: Three (Football) Field Studies , 1976 .

[11]  J. Harvey,et al.  Focus of attention, self-esteem, and the attribution of causality , 1976 .

[12]  Alexis S. Tan,et al.  Television Use and Self-esteem of Blacks , 1979 .

[13]  S. Duval,et al.  Self-focus, felt responsibility, and helping behavior. , 1979 .

[14]  M. Csíkszentmihályi,et al.  Self-awareness and aversive experience in everyday life , 1982 .

[15]  J. D. McCarthy,et al.  Issues of Validity and Reliability in the Use of Real-Ideal Discrepancy Scores to Measure Self-Regard , 1983 .

[16]  Television viewing and public trust , 1983 .

[17]  M. Morgan Heavy Television Viewing and Perceived Quality of Life , 1984 .

[18]  E. Higgins,et al.  Self-discrepancies and emotional vulnerability: how magnitude, accessibility, and type of discrepancy influence affect. , 1986, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[19]  Norbert Mundorf,et al.  Effects of an opposite-gender companion's affect to horror on distress, delight, and attraction. , 1986 .

[20]  M. Seiwert,et al.  Television Viewing Types, General Life Satisfaction, and Viewing Amount: An Empirical Study in West Germany , 1987 .

[21]  D. Zillmann Mood Management Through Communication Choices , 1988 .

[22]  Seth Finn,et al.  Social Isolation and Social Support as Correlates of Television Viewing Motivations , 1988 .

[23]  Janet Metcalfe,et al.  Mood Dependent Memory for Internal Versus External Events , 1989 .

[24]  R. Hass,et al.  The effects of self-focused attention on perspective-taking and anxiety , 1990 .

[25]  Half-baked idea: Deindividuation and the nonreactive assessment of self-awareness. , 1991 .

[26]  Roy F. Baumeister,et al.  Escaping the self : alcoholism, spirituality, masochism, and other flights from the burden of selfhood , 1991 .

[27]  J. Mulilis,et al.  Effects of self-focus, discrepancy between self and standard, and outcome expectancy favorability on the tendency to match self to standard or to withdraw. , 1992, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[28]  J. Mills,et al.  The Appeal of Tragedy: An Attitude Interpretation , 1993 .

[29]  P. Niedenthal,et al.  Emotion Congruence in Perception , 1994 .

[30]  Selective viewing: Cognition, personality and television genres , 1994 .

[31]  Paula M. Niedenthal,et al.  Resolution of Lexical Ambiguity by Emotional State , 1995 .

[32]  D. R. Lehman,et al.  Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin Heine, Lehman / Culture and Self-satisfaction Culture, Self-discrepancies, and Self-satisfaction , 2022 .

[33]  Joseph P. Forgas,et al.  On feeling good and being rude: Affective influences on language use and request formulations. , 1999 .

[34]  S. Lewis,et al.  Overlapping addictions and self-esteem among college men and women. , 1999, Addictive behaviors.

[35]  R. Hoyle,et al.  Effect of Private Self-Awareness on Negative Affect and Self-Referent Attribution: A Quantitative Review , 2000 .

[36]  Gordon W. Russell,et al.  Why we watch: The attractions of violent entertainment , 2000 .

[37]  Paul J. Silvia,et al.  Objective Self-Awareness Theory: Recent Progress and Enduring Problems , 2001 .

[38]  D. R. Lehman,et al.  Divergent consequences of success and failure in japan and north america: an investigation of self-improving motivations and malleable selves. , 2001, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[39]  L. Marsch,et al.  Development and Validation of the Situational Self-Awareness Scale , 2001, Consciousness and Cognition.