Sometimes we come out ahead and sometimes we fall behind. Sometimes the status quo is maintained and we end up where we began. The status quo can be disappointing when things might have gone better and relieving when they might have gone worse, but it is not clear how the status quo will feel when things might have gone better or worse. Hume (1739/2000) and Bain (1859) would contend that feelings of disappointment and relief will neutralize one another. The evaluative space model (Cacioppo & Berntson, 1994), which conceptualizes the positive and negative substrates of the affect system as separable, raises the possibility that the status quo will elicit mixed feelings in such circumstances. To test this possibility, we had participants play...
Based on the balance theory (Heider, 1958), we hypothesized that emotions (i.e., schadenfreude, rese...
Our perception of how others expect us to feel has significant implications for our emotional functi...
Our perception of how others expect us to feel has significant implications for our emotional functi...
Sometimes we come out ahead and sometimes we fall behind. Sometimes the status quo is maintained and...
ABSTRACT—Because of counterfactual comparisons, good out-comes that could have been better (i.e., di...
Most of the time games make us happy, but sometimes they are frustrating or make us feel sad. They a...
International audienceTraditional research in consumer psychology considers valence (negative vs. po...
Negative outcomes seem to induce much more intense and long-lasting emotions when a positive outcome...
Can we experience positive (PA) and negative affect (NA) separately (i.e., affective independence), ...
Previous research has suggested that a goal-incongruent outcome leads to more intense negative emoti...
Expectancies of success are widely thought to influence people's emo-tional reactions to perfor...
The authors hypothesized that thinking about the absence of a positive event from one’s life would i...
Within the field of Management and Organizational Studies, we have noted a tendency for researchers ...
Our perception of how others expect us to feel has significant implications for our emotional functi...
Our perception of how others expect us to feel has significant implications for our emotional functi...
Based on the balance theory (Heider, 1958), we hypothesized that emotions (i.e., schadenfreude, rese...
Our perception of how others expect us to feel has significant implications for our emotional functi...
Our perception of how others expect us to feel has significant implications for our emotional functi...
Sometimes we come out ahead and sometimes we fall behind. Sometimes the status quo is maintained and...
ABSTRACT—Because of counterfactual comparisons, good out-comes that could have been better (i.e., di...
Most of the time games make us happy, but sometimes they are frustrating or make us feel sad. They a...
International audienceTraditional research in consumer psychology considers valence (negative vs. po...
Negative outcomes seem to induce much more intense and long-lasting emotions when a positive outcome...
Can we experience positive (PA) and negative affect (NA) separately (i.e., affective independence), ...
Previous research has suggested that a goal-incongruent outcome leads to more intense negative emoti...
Expectancies of success are widely thought to influence people's emo-tional reactions to perfor...
The authors hypothesized that thinking about the absence of a positive event from one’s life would i...
Within the field of Management and Organizational Studies, we have noted a tendency for researchers ...
Our perception of how others expect us to feel has significant implications for our emotional functi...
Our perception of how others expect us to feel has significant implications for our emotional functi...
Based on the balance theory (Heider, 1958), we hypothesized that emotions (i.e., schadenfreude, rese...
Our perception of how others expect us to feel has significant implications for our emotional functi...
Our perception of how others expect us to feel has significant implications for our emotional functi...