“…Research on ostracism has grown rapidly due to the pervasiveness of the phenomenon in people’s everyday lives (Nezlek, Wesselmann, Wheeler, & Williams, 2012) and due to the magnitude of its effects on people’s well-being (DeWall, Gilman, Sharif, Carboni, & Rice, 2012; Lansu, van Noorden, & Deutz, 2017; Niu, Sun, Tian, Fan, & Zhou, 2016). Prior studies have maintained a focus on the affective and behavioral impacts of ostracism, including how it influences risk-taking (Buelow & Wirth, 2017; Duclos, Wan, & Jiang, 2013), affect (Fung & Alden, 2017; Schaafsma et al, 2015), basic need satisfaction (Hartgerink et al, 2015; Williams, Cheung, & Choi, 2000), and antisocial behavior (DeWall et al, 2009; Kouchaki & Wareham, 2015; Poon, Teng, Wong, & Chen, 2016). However, relatively few studies have scrutinized how ostracism can influence people’s perceptions of the consequences of their behavior or how postostracism perceptions of behavior costs can influence people’s actual behavioral decisions.…”