Have you ever been in a situation when you’ve anticipated feeling negatively threatened, only to be surprised to experience the positive invigorating experience of challenge instead? Most of us have, whether it’s before a test, a competition, social interaction, public speaking or speaking up. New research from Associate Professor Mark D. Seery from the University of Buffalo, suggests that whether you feel threatened or challenged is dependent on the hierarchy of your goals and values in a given situation.
Imagine yourself in the situation of speaking up to a unanimous and disagreeing group to which you belong. Do you anticipate feeling threatened or challenged? How will you evaluate your personal resources of goals, values and beliefs versus the demands of the situation?
A long history of research in psychology has studied the consequences of such social pressure which typically results in conforming to a group’s opinion. Conforming is one of the most powerful forces of social influence. However, relatively little research has attempted to measure and understand an individuals’ internal reaction during such disagreement.
Turns out that facing the prospect of a disagreeing group need not necessarily result in the negative experience of threat with the resultant conformity, as external behaviours mask a range of internal states.
When you experience a situation as challenging, arteries in the body dilate on the whole, which facilitates the pumping of a relatively greater volume of blood. In contrast, experiencing the same situation as a threat results in arteries constricting with relatively less blood being pumped, despite comparable increases in the heart’s activity.
|
|