Eight studies reveal an intriguing phenomenon: individuals who have higher trust in their feelings can predict the outcomes of future events better than individuals with lower trust in their feelings. This emotional oracle effect was found across a variety of prediction domains, including (a) the 2008 US Democratic presidential nomination, (b) movie box-office success, (c) the winner of American Idol, (d) the stock market, (e) college football, and even (f) the weather. It is mostly high trust in feelings that improves prediction accuracy rather than low trust in feelings that impairs it. However, the effect occurs only among individuals who possess sufficient background knowledge about the prediction domain, and it dissipates when the pred...
This article explores the role of magical thinking in the subjective probabilities of future chance ...
The aim of this thesis was to examine the effects of people’s current moods andemotions on affective...
The diagnosticity of feelings in judgment depends not only on their representativeness and relevance...
Eight studies reveal an intriguing phenomenon: individuals who have higher trust in their feelings c...
People try to make decisions that will improve their lives and make them happy, and to do so, they r...
People rely on predicted and remembered emotion to guide important decisions. But how much can they ...
Not only are subjective feelings an integral part of many judgments and decisions, they can even lea...
When making affective forecasts, people commit the impact bias. They overestimate the impact an emot...
Recent findings suggest that we neglect our personality to predict our future emotional reactions to...
The authors argue that emotions characterized by certainty appraisals lead to heuristic information ...
Affective forecasting denotes the ability to predict one’s own future emotions. Past research indica...
We use data from Twitter.com to study the interplay between affect and expectations about uncertain ...
We use data from Twitter.com to study the interplay between affect and expectations about uncertain ...
Affective forecasting refers to the capacity to predict future feelings. Humans have been found to e...
We use data from Twitter.com to study the interplay between affect and expectations about uncertain ...
This article explores the role of magical thinking in the subjective probabilities of future chance ...
The aim of this thesis was to examine the effects of people’s current moods andemotions on affective...
The diagnosticity of feelings in judgment depends not only on their representativeness and relevance...
Eight studies reveal an intriguing phenomenon: individuals who have higher trust in their feelings c...
People try to make decisions that will improve their lives and make them happy, and to do so, they r...
People rely on predicted and remembered emotion to guide important decisions. But how much can they ...
Not only are subjective feelings an integral part of many judgments and decisions, they can even lea...
When making affective forecasts, people commit the impact bias. They overestimate the impact an emot...
Recent findings suggest that we neglect our personality to predict our future emotional reactions to...
The authors argue that emotions characterized by certainty appraisals lead to heuristic information ...
Affective forecasting denotes the ability to predict one’s own future emotions. Past research indica...
We use data from Twitter.com to study the interplay between affect and expectations about uncertain ...
We use data from Twitter.com to study the interplay between affect and expectations about uncertain ...
Affective forecasting refers to the capacity to predict future feelings. Humans have been found to e...
We use data from Twitter.com to study the interplay between affect and expectations about uncertain ...
This article explores the role of magical thinking in the subjective probabilities of future chance ...
The aim of this thesis was to examine the effects of people’s current moods andemotions on affective...
The diagnosticity of feelings in judgment depends not only on their representativeness and relevance...