Peer-Reviewed Journal Details
Mandatory Fields
Van Tilburg, W.A.P., & Igou, E.R.
2017
January
Self And Identity
Can boredom help? Increased prosocial intentions in response to boredom
Published
()
Optional Fields
Boredom helping meaning self-regulation interpersonal behavior MORTALITY SALIENCE SENSATION-SEEKING SELF LIFE SATISFACTION AGGRESSION PRONENESS BEHAVIOR MEANINGFULNESS MANAGEMENT
16
82
96
Boredom is typically regarded a nuisance. Past research on boredom depicts this common emotion as a correlate of many detrimental psychological and social factors, including addiction, depression, discrimination, and aggression. We present a more nuanced perspective on boredom. Specifically, we propose and test that state boredom serves an important self-regulatory function with the potential to foster positive interpersonal consequences: It signals a lack of purpose in activity and fosters a search for meaningful engagement. We examined whether boredom can subsequently cause prosocial intentions if the corresponding prosocial behavior is seen as purposeful. As predicted, boredom, which is characterized by a search for meaning (pilot study), promoted prosocial intentions (Experiment 1), in particular when the corresponding behavior was seen as highly meaningful (Experiment 2). Our novel findings suggest that boredom can have desirable consequences and recasts this emotion as not merely good or bad but rather as personally and socially functional.
10.1080/15298868.2016.1218925
Grant Details