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Living Large: Affect Amplification in Visual Perception Predicts Emotional Reactivity to Events in Daily Life

Identifieur interne : 001676 ( Pmc/Checkpoint ); précédent : 001675; suivant : 001677

Living Large: Affect Amplification in Visual Perception Predicts Emotional Reactivity to Events in Daily Life

Auteurs : Spencer L. Palder ; Scott Ode ; Tianwei Liu ; Michael D. Robinson

Source :

RBID : PMC:3527679

Abstract

It was hypothesized that affect-amplifying individuals would be more reactive to affective events in daily life. Affect amplification was quantified in terms of overestimating the font size of positive and negative, relative to neutral, words in a basic perception task. Subsequently, the same (N = 70) individuals completed a daily diary protocol in which they reported on levels of daily stressors, provocations, and social support as well as six emotion-related outcomes for 14 consecutive days. Individual differences in affect amplification moderated reactivity to daily affective events in all such analyses. For example, daily stressor levels predicted cognitive failures at high, but not low, levels of affect amplification. Affect amplification, then, appears to have widespread utility in understanding individual differences in emotional reactivity.


Url:
DOI: 10.1080/02699931.2012.724011
PubMed: 22989107
PubMed Central: 3527679


Affiliations:


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PMC:3527679

Le document en format XML

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(phone: 701-231-6312; fax: 701-231-8426)</corresp>
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