Do YOU enjoy the misfortune of others? Then you may be a PSYCHOPATH: Scientists link schadenfreude to 'dark' traits including sadism and narcissism
- Taking pleasure in the suffering of others is known as schadenfreude in German
- Scientists say the feeling is linked to sadism, narcissism and psycopathy
- Dehumanising others is a core technique used by psychopaths that also drives schadenfreude
Giggling at the misfortune of others may seem a harmless pleasure, but according to a new study, it could mean you're a psychopath.
Scientists have linked taking pleasure in the suffering of others - a feeling known as schadenfreude - to several 'dark' psychological traits.
These include sadism, narcissism and psychopathy - an inability to empathise with your peers.
Failing to see others as fully human is a common trait in psychopaths and experts say it also plays a key role in schadenfreude.
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Giggling at the misfortune of others may seem a harmless pleasure - but according to a new study, it could mean you're a psychopath (stock image)
Researchers at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, reviewed three decades' worth of research into schadenfreude - which translates to 'harm-joy' in German.
Since ancient times, some scholars have condemned schadenfreude as malicious, while others have perceived it as morally neutral or even virtuous.
'Schadenfreude is an uncanny emotion that is difficult to assimilate,' said study lead author Professor Philippe Rochat.
'It's kind of a warm-cold experience that is associated with a sense of guilt.
'It can make you feel odd to experience pleasure when hearing about bad things happening to someone else.'
The authors propose that the feeling is driven by three motivators.
Some people enjoy the pain of others simply because it helps them feel better about themselves, a form of schadenfreude powered by 'self-evaluation'.
Others revel in the misfortune of those they consider of a different social group to their own - such as football supporters enjoying the loss of a rival team.
The third trigger is justice: Those who enjoy misfortune if the victim has previously behaved badly or shown themselves to be immoral.
Underpinning all three of these emotions is dehumanisation - the capacity to look at others as less human than yourself, researchers found.

Scientists have linked taking pleasure in the pain of others - a feeling known as schadenfreude - to several 'dark' psychological traits (stock image)
They say that three 'dark' personality traits overlap 'substantially' with schadenfreude: Sadism, narcissism and psychopathy.
Ordinary people may temporarily lose empathy for others, but those with these three traits struggle far more to put themselves in the shoes of others.
What pulls people away from schadenfreude is the ability to feel empathy for others and to perceive them as fully human.
'We all experience schadenfreude but we don't like to think about it too much because it shows how ambivalent we can be to our fellow humans,' Professor Rochat said.
'But schadenfreude points to our ingrained concerns and it's important to study it in a systematic way if we want to understand human nature.'
The study was published in the journal New Ideas in Psychology.
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