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      Judgment under emotional certainty and uncertainty: the effects of specific emotions on information processing.

      Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
      Adult, Affect, Attitude, Cognition, Female, Humans, Judgment, Male, Questionnaires

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          Abstract

          The authors argued that emotions characterized by certainty appraisals promote heuristic processing, whereas emotions characterized by uncertainty appraisals result in systematic processing. The 1st experiment demonstrated that the certainty associated with an emotion affects the certainty experienced in subsequent situations. The next 3 experiments investigated effects on processing of emotions associated with certainty and uncertainty. Compared with emotions associated with uncertainty, emotions associated with certainty resulted in greater reliance on the expertise of a source of a persuasive message in Experiment 2, more stereotyping in Experiment 3, and less attention to argument quality in Experiment 4. In contrast to previous theories linking valence and processing, these findings suggest that the certainty appraisal content of emotions is also important in determining whether people engage in systematic or heuristic processing.

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          Most cited references47

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          Positive affect facilitates creative problem solving.

          Four experiments indicated that positive affect, induced by means of seeing a few minutes of a comedy film or by means of receiving a small bag of candy, improved performance on two tasks that are generally regarded as requiring creative ingenuity: Duncker's (1945) candle task and M. T. Mednick, S. A. Mednick, and E. V. Mednick's (1964) Remote Associates Test. One condition in which negative affect was induced and two in which subjects engaged in physical exercise (intended to represent affectless arousal) failed to produce comparable improvements in creative performance. The influence of positive affect on creativity was discussed in terms of a broader theory of the impact of positive affect on cognitive organization.
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            • Article: not found

            Facial expression and emotion.

            P Ekman (1993)
            Cross-cultural research on facial expression and the developments of methods to measure facial expression are briefly summarized. What has been learned about emotion from this work on the face is then elucidated. Four questions about facial expression and emotion are discussed: What information does an expression typically convey? Can there be emotion without facial expression? Can there be a facial expression of emotion without emotion? How do individuals differ in their facial expressions of emotion?
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              • Record: found
              • Abstract: not found
              • Article: not found

              Affect, generalization, and the perception of risk.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                11761319

                Chemistry
                Adult,Affect,Attitude,Cognition,Female,Humans,Judgment,Male,Questionnaires
                Chemistry
                Adult, Affect, Attitude, Cognition, Female, Humans, Judgment, Male, Questionnaires

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