If you are interested in different angles of courage, consider these:
( ResearchGate ): A study on how "courageous followers"—those who speak up against unethical practices or challenge leaders for the good of the organization—are actually the secret to effective leadership.
( PMC ): A fascinating "spider test" study where researchers measured courage by how close participants with phobias would get to tarantulas, finding that courage scores directly predicted their ability to approach the source of their fear.
This research dives into a psychological "blind spot" in how we define courage. While we often think of courage as the act of facing fear, this paper suggests that our brains are biased toward .
( ResearchGate ): Explores how people use "courageous behavior" in the workplace to reconcile tensions between who they are and how they want to be seen by others.
Are courageous actions successful actions? - Taylor & Francis
: The study found that people overwhelmingly describe courageous acts as having a successful result. When an action ends in failure, people are significantly less likely to label it as "courageous," even if the risk and fear involved were identical.
: It argues that "success" is an unarticulated part of our mental definition of courage. We rarely call a failed attempt "courageous"; instead, we might view it as reckless or foolish. Other Notable Papers