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      Assessing Mood in Daily Life

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          Abstract

          Abstract. The repeated measurement of moods in everyday life, as is common in ambulatory monitoring, requires parsimonious scales, which may challenge the reliability of the measures. The current paper evaluates the factor structure, the reliability, and the sensitivity to change of a six-item mood scale designed for momentary assessment in daily life. We analyzed data from 187 participants who reported their current mood four times per day during seven consecutive days using a multilevel approach. The results suggest that the proposed three factors Calmness, Valence, and Energetic arousal are appropriate to assess fluctuations within persons over time. However, calmness and valence are not distinguishable at the between-person level. Furthermore, the analyses showed that two-item scales provide measures that are reliable at the different levels and highly sensitive to change.

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          Most cited references27

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          Belief and feeling: evidence for an accessibility model of emotional self-report.

          This review organizes a variety of phenomena related to emotional self-report. In doing so, the authors offer an accessibility model that specifies the types of factors that contribute to emotional self-reports under different reporting conditions. One important distinction is between emotion, which is episodic, experiential, and contextual, and beliefs about emotion, which are semantic, conceptual, and decontextualized. This distinction is important in understanding the discrepancies that often occur when people are asked to report on feelings they are currently experiencing versus those that they are not currently experiencing. The accessibility model provides an organizing framework for understanding self-reports of emotion and suggests some new directions for research.
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            Toward a consensual structure of mood.

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              On the bipolarity of positive and negative affect.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                jpa
                European Journal of Psychological Assessment
                Hogrefe Publishing
                1015-5759
                January 2007
                : 23
                : 4
                : 258-267
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ] University of Fribourg, Switzerland
                [ 2 ] University of California, Los Angeles, USA
                Author notes
                Wilhelm Peter, Department of Psychology, University of Fribourg, Rue de Faucigny 2, CH-1700, Fribourg, Switzerland, peter.wilhelm@ 123456unifr.ch
                Article
                jpa2304258
                10.1027/1015-5759.23.4.258
                0d4c56c4-ee05-4b64-a630-150c86da7e95
                Copyright @ 2007
                History
                Categories
                Original Articles

                Assessment, Evaluation & Research methods,Psychology,General behavioral science
                multilevel confirmatory factor analysis,electronic diary,mood,affect,ambulatory assessment,ecological momentary assessment

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