Mentalizing in reactance: A functional magnetic resonance imaging study of freedom threats

Christina Mühlberger*, Eva Jonas, Stefan Reiß, Chiara Jutzi, Martin Kronbichler, Johannes Klackl

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Psychological reactance is a motivational state that leads people to regain threatened or lost freedoms. It is accompanied by anger and negative cognitions and causes various effects such as resistance, aggression, and increased attractiveness of the original freedom. Despite a wealth of studies exploring the causes and consequences of reactance, there has been little effort to understand the phenomenon of reactance itself. To learn more about the state of reactance itself and to distinguish it from the related construct of anger, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging. We asked participants to read and imagine being in freedom-threatening, anger-arousing, and neutral scenarios. Using the Neurosynth image decoder, we discovered that, compared to the neutral and anger-arousing scenarios, the freedom-threatening scenarios produced a pattern of activation characteristic of imaging studies that feature terms such as theory of mind, mental states, and mentalizing. This suggests that when people are led to imagine experiences in which their freedom is restricted, they exhibit a pattern of brain activation that resembles activation patterns found in mentalizing studies, and this is not due to the affective consequence of reactance (i.e., anger).
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)179-191
Number of pages13
JournalMotivation Science
Volume11
Issue number2
Early online date23 May 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2025

Keywords

  • reactance
  • higher-order cognitions
  • mentalizing
  • anger
  • functional magnetic resonance imaging

Fields of Science and Technology Classification 2012

  • 501 Psychology

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