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The Dark Triad Traits, Humor Styles, and Schadenfreude: Others' Misery as the Devil's Laughing Stocks

Journal

JAPANESE PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jpr.12403

Keywords

Dark Triad; humor styles; indirect effects; schadenfreude

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This research examines the relationships between the Dark Triad traits, humor styles, and schadenfreude. The results suggest that individuals with prominent dark traits derive pleasure from others' misfortune, and aggressive humor styles may contribute to this schadenfreude.
This research investigated the relationships of the Dark Triad traits, humor styles, and schadenfreude with 169 participants who completed the Short Dark Triad, the Humor Style Questionnaire, and a measure of schadenfreude. Significant correlations imply that those with salient dark traits (psychopathy, Machiavellianism, narcissism) elicit pleasure from others' misfortune. Additionally, schadenfreude can be a product of self-defeating and aggressive humor styles. Indirect effect analysis revealed the significance of the indirect effect of the measured aggressive humor style on the Dark Triad's direct effects on schadenfreude. These results imply that those with salient Dark Triad traits enjoy others' misery as a means to undermine them. Hence, individuals with salient Dark Triad traits tend to engage in downward social comparison.

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