1..文章标题:Emotional and behavioral reactions to social undermining: A closer look at perceived offender motives [size=1em]Craig D. Crossley, a,
[size=1em][size=1em]aDepartment of Management, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 1240 114 CBA, NE 68588, USA
[size=1em]Received 23 December 2006;
[size=1em]accepted 2 June 2008.
[size=1em]Available online 11 July 2008.
[size=1em][size=1em]AbstractThis study examined how perceptions of underlying offender motives affect victims’ emotional and behavioral reactions toward their offender. Perceived offender motives of malice and greed were embedded in a cognition–emotion–behavior model based on theories of attribution, forgiveness and revenge, and tested in the context of social undermining. Findings suggested that victims distinguished between offender malice and greed, and that these attributions shaped subsequent emotional reactions, which in turn demonstrated independent relations with revenge, avoidance, and reconciliation.