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Journal ArticleDOI

The ugly truth: negative gossip about celebrities and positive gossip about self entertain people in different ways.

TLDR
Although participants’ ratings did not show they were particularly happy on hearing negative gossip about celebrities, the significantly enhanced neural activity in the reward system suggested that they were indeed amused, and via enhanced functional connectivity, the prefrontal executive control network was involved in regulating the rewards system by giving explicit pleasure ratings according to social norm compliance, rather than natural true feelings.
Abstract
In contrast to abstract trait words which describe people's general personality, gossip is about personal affairs of others. Although neural correlates underlying processing self-related trait words have been well documented, it remains poorly understood how the human brain processes gossip. In the present fMRI study, participants were instructed to rate their online emotional states upon hearing positive and negative gossip about celebrities, themselves, and their best friends. Explicit behavioral ratings suggested that participants were happier to hear positive gossip and more annoyed to hear negative gossip about themselves than about celebrities and best friends. At the neural level, dissociated neural networks were involved in processing the positive gossip about self and the negative gossip about celebrities. On the one hand, the superior medial prefrontal cortex responded not only to self-related gossip but also to moral transgressions, and neural activity in the orbital prefrontal cortex increased linearly with pleasure ratings on positive gossip about self. On the other hand, although participants' ratings did not show they were particularly happy on hearing negative gossip about celebrities, the significantly enhanced neural activity in the reward system suggested that they were indeed amused. Moreover, via enhanced functional connectivity, the prefrontal executive control network was involved in regulating the reward system by giving explicit pleasure ratings according to social norm compliance, rather than natural true feelings.

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Citations
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Celebrity critiquing: hot or not? Teen girls’ attitudes on and responses to the practice of negative celebrity critiquing

TL;DR: By conducting focus groups with teen girls, the authors explored female adolescents' responses to and perceptions of increasingly negative, scandal-driven critiquing of celebrities, and found that teenagers at first were entertained by the comments about celebrities, but disapproved of cases that seemed to be intended to hurt the celebrity.
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Online celebrity aggression: A combination of low empathy and high moral disengagement? The relationship between empathy and moral disengagement and adolescents’ online celebrity aggression

TL;DR: Investigating the relationship between affective and cognitive empathy, moral disengagement and online celebrity aggression concluded that strategies aiming at reducing celebrity aggression may benefit from a focus on socio-cognitive characteristics.
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Emotional, especially negative microblogs are more popular on the web: evidence from an fMRI study

TL;DR: An important behavioral pattern in which negative information prevails in the transmission through microblogs is revealed, as well as the neural correlates with this process, which provides empirical evidence of how reposting works in microblogs and how the brain is involved in social propagation of information.
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The mass, fake news, and cognition security

TL;DR: CogSec as discussed by the authors is a multidisciplinary research field that leverages the knowledge from social science, psychology, cognition science, neuroscience, AI and computer science, which studies the potential impacts of fake news on human cognition, ranging from misperception, untrusted knowledge acquisition, targeted opinion/attitude formation, to biased decision making.
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International Affective Picture System (IAPS) : Technical Manual and Affective Ratings

Peter Lang
TL;DR: The International Affective Picture System (IAPS) as mentioned in this paper provides a set of normative emotional stimuli for experimental investigations of emotion and attention for the NIMH Center for Emotion and Attention.
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At the neural level, dissociated neural networks were involved in processing the positive gossip about self and the negative gossip about celebrities.