On the Relation of Boredom and Sadistic Aggression

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Authors

What gives rise to sadism? While sadistic behavior (i.e., harming others for pleasure) is welldocumented, past empirical research is nearly silent regarding the psychological factors behind it. We help close this gap by suggesting that boredom plays a crucial role in the emergence of sadistic tendencies. Across 9 diverse studies, we provide correlational and experimental evidence for a link between boredom and sadism. We demonstrate that sadistic tendencies are more pronounced among people who report chronic proneness to boredom in everyday life (Studies 1A-1F, N = 1,780). We then document that this relationship generalizes across a variety of important societal contexts, including online trolling; sadism in the military; sadistic behavior among parents; and sadistic fantasies (Studies 2–5, N = 1,740). Finally, we manipulate boredom experimentally and show that inducing boredom increases sadistic behavior (i.e., killing worms; destroying other participants’ pay; Studies 6–9, N = 4,097). However, alternatives matter: When several behavioral alternatives are available, boredom only motivates sadistic behavior among individuals with high dispositional sadism (Study 7). Conversely, when there is no alternative, boredom increases sadistic behavior across the board, even among individuals low in dispositional sadism (Studies 8 and 9). We further show that excitement and novelty seeking mediate the effects of boredom, and that boredom not only promotes sadistic (proactive) aggression, but reactive aggression as well (Study 9). Overall, the present work contributes to a better understanding of sadism and highlights the destructive potential of boredom. We discuss implications for basic research on sadism and boredom, as well as applied implications for society at large.

Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Personality and Social Psychology
Volume121
Issue number3
Pages (from-to)573-600
Number of pages28
ISSN0022-3514
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01.09.2021
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 American Psychological Association

    Research areas

  • aggression, boredom, destructiveness, harm, sadism
  • Psychology

DOI

Recently viewed

Researchers

  1. Georg Reischauer

Publications

  1. Second International Workshop on Linked Data-driven Resilience Research 2023
  2. Do children with deficits in basic cognitive functions profit from mixed age primary schools?
  3. Working hour arrangements and working hours
  4. The role of gestures in a teacher-student-discourse about atoms
  5. Logik
  6. Where Tasks, Technology, and Textbooks Meet: An Exploratory Analysis of English Language Teachers’ Perceived Affordances of an Intelligent Language Tutoring System
  7. Requests for reasoning in geometrical textbook tasks for primary-level students
  8. Addressing the financing needs of the European Union through three C’s
  9. Towards a Critique of Social Networking
  10. Revisions and further developments of the Occupational Stress Indicator
  11. Introduction: A strategy for overcoming the definitional struggle
  12. Essential ecosystem service variables for monitoring progress towards sustainability
  13. On the impact of network size and average degree on the robustness of centrality measures
  14. Microsatellites and allozymes as the genetic memory of habitat fragmentation and defragmentation in populations of the ground beetle Carabus auronitens (Col., Carabidae)
  15. An indirectly controlled high-speed servo valve for IC engines using piezo actuators
  16. Relative wage positions and quit behavior
  17. Dynamics of Supply Chains Under Mixed Production Strategies
  18. "Lob des Unscheinbaren"
  19. Sensitive, simultaneous determination of P, S, Cl, Br and I containing pesticides in environmental samples by GC hyphenated with collision-cell ICP-MS
  20. Personal need for structure as a boundary condition for humor in leadership
  21. Key landscape features in the provision of ecosystem services
  22. Widening the evaluative space for ecosystem services
  23. Interkulturelle Differenzen im Selbstkonzept von Managern
  24. Crowdsourcing Hypothesis Tests
  25. Strategies to Induce Non-cooperating Countries to Join a Climate-policy Coalition
  26. Die WTO
  27. Konzeptionsentwicklung – eine Einführung
  28. Vicki Baum und Gina Kaus
  29. Corporate Social Responsibility in Innovation: Insights from two Cases of Syngenta's Activities in Genetically Modified Organisms
  30. Rechtskonformität
  31. § 44 VwGO (Objektive Klagehäufung)
  32. § 395: Verschwiegensheitspflicht