4.4 Article

Dispositional forgiveness buffers paranoia following interpersonal transgression

Journal

JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY
Volume 91, Issue 3, Pages 556-565

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jopy.12755

Keywords

forgiveness; interpersonal transgression; paranoia; personality; prisoner's dilemma game

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This study provides the first evidence that dispositional forgiveness can buffer feelings of paranoia following interpersonal transgressions, and that dispositional forgiveness is causally related to reduced paranoia.
Objective To test a novel proposition that dispositional forgiveness has the unrecognized benefit of buffering feelings of paranoia following negative interpersonal experiences and interpersonal transgressions. Methods In Study 1 (N = 128), we used an experimental paradigm, the Prisoner's Dilemma Game (PDG), to test the premise that an interpersonal transgression increases state paranoia. Study 2 (N = 180) used a longitudinal design to test the central proposition that dispositional forgiveness buffers state paranoia following naturally occurring difficult (vs pleasant) interpersonal events. Study 3 (N = 102) used a novel experimental paradigm to determine the causal effect of manipulating forgiveness on paranoia. Results In Study 1, interpersonal transgressions in the PDG increased paranoia. In Study 2, paranoia was higher following difficult (rather than pleasant) events, and higher levels of dispositional forgiveness moderated the negative effect of difficult events on paranoia. In Study 3, there was a causal effect of forgiveness on (reduced) paranoia. Conclusions This is the first evidence that (1) interpersonal transgressions increase paranoia, (2) high dispositional forgiveness moderates the deleterious effect of interpersonal transgression on paranoia, and (3) dispositional forgiveness is causally related to less paranoia.

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