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      Affect Monitoring and the Primacy of Feelings in Judgment

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      Journal of Consumer Research
      University of Chicago Press

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          Constructive Consumer Choice Processes

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            Affect, cognition, and awareness: affective priming with optimal and suboptimal stimulus exposures.

            The affective primacy hypothesis (R. B. Zajonc, 1980) asserts that positive and negative affective reactions can be evoked with minimal stimulus input and virtually no cognitive processing. The present work tested this hypothesis by comparing the effects of affective and cognitive priming under extremely brief (suboptimal) and longer (optimal) exposure durations. At suboptimal exposures only affective primes produced significant shifts in Ss' judgments of novel stimuli. These results suggest that when affect is elicited outside of conscious awareness, it is diffuse and nonspecific, and its origin and address are not accessible. Having minimal cognitive participation, such gross and nonspecific affective reactions can therefore be diffused or displaced onto unrelated stimuli. At optimal exposures this pattern of results was reversed such that only cognitive primes produced significant shifts in judgments. Together, these results support the affective primacy hypothesis.
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              Measuring the hedonic and utilitarian sources of consumer attitudes

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Consumer Research
                J Consum Res
                University of Chicago Press
                0093-5301
                1537-5277
                September 01 2001
                September 01 2001
                : 28
                : 2
                : 167-188
                Article
                10.1086/322896
                b7b5ae21-2400-4695-8f24-a9ae65054d96
                © 2001
                History

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