There have been challenges on the negative state relief model since 1980's.
Daniel Batson and his associates found in 1989 that, regardless of anticipated mood enhancement, high-empathy subjects helped more than low-empathy subjects. In other words, high-empathy subjects would still helped more either under easy escape conditions or even when they could probably get good mood to relieve from negative state without helping. Therefore, they concluded that, obviously, something other than relieving negative state was motivating the
helping behavior of the high-empathy subjects in their studies. It contradicted with the theory proposed by
Robert Cialdini in 1987 For very young children, a negative mood would not increase their helpfulness because they had not yet learned to associate pro-social behaviour with social rewards. Grade-school children who had been socialized to an awareness of the helping norm (but had not fully internalized it) would help more in response to negative affect only when someone gave them reinforcements or rewards. For adults, however, helpfulness has become self-reinforcing; therefore, a negative mood reliably increased helping. However, according to the study conducted by Kenrick, negative emotions in children promoted their helping behaviours if direct rewards were possibly provided for their
pro-social behaviours. Specific types of negative feelings that increase helping - guilt, embarrassment, or awareness of cognitive inconsistency, were not viewed as uniquely important. They just fell within the general category of negative mood. == Example ==