Increased moment-to-moment predictability, or inertia, of negative affect has been identified as an important dynamic marker of psychological maladjustment, and increased vulnerability to depression in particular. However, little is known about the processes underlying emotional inertia. The current article examines how the emotional context, and people's responses to it, are related to emotional inertia. We investigated how individual differences in the inertia of negative affect (NA) are related to individual differences in exposure, reactivity, and recovery from emotional events, in daily life (assessed using experience sampling) as well as in the lab (assessed using an emotional film-clip task), among 200 participants commencing their f...
Emotional inertia refers to the extent to which emotional states are predictable over time and are r...
Negative emotional inertia refers to the degree of which a current emotional state can be predicted ...
Feelings change. People’s emotional lives are characterized by ups and downs, changes and fluctuatio...
Increased moment-to-moment predictability, or inertia, of negative affect has been identified as an ...
People differ markedly in terms of how their moods and emotions fluctuate over time. One central fea...
Previous studies have linked higher emotional inertia (i.e., a stronger autoregressive slope of emot...
Previous studies have linked higher emotional inertia (i.e., a stronger autoregressive slope of emot...
In this article, we examine the concept of emotional inertia as a fundamental property of the emotio...
Emotional inertia—the degree to which people's feelings carry over from one moment to the next—is an...
Emotional inertia—the degree to which people’s feelings carry over from one moment to the next—is an...
The autocorrelation or inertia of negative affect reflects how much negative emotions carry over fro...
Emotional inertia is a central feature of emotion dynamics and it refers to the degree to which emot...
Emotional inertia (the moment-to-moment persistence of emotional states) is an index of regulatory d...
The tendency for emotions to be predictable over time, labelled emotional inertia, has been linked t...
Emotional inertia refers to the degree to which a person’s current emotional state is predicted by t...
Emotional inertia refers to the extent to which emotional states are predictable over time and are r...
Negative emotional inertia refers to the degree of which a current emotional state can be predicted ...
Feelings change. People’s emotional lives are characterized by ups and downs, changes and fluctuatio...
Increased moment-to-moment predictability, or inertia, of negative affect has been identified as an ...
People differ markedly in terms of how their moods and emotions fluctuate over time. One central fea...
Previous studies have linked higher emotional inertia (i.e., a stronger autoregressive slope of emot...
Previous studies have linked higher emotional inertia (i.e., a stronger autoregressive slope of emot...
In this article, we examine the concept of emotional inertia as a fundamental property of the emotio...
Emotional inertia—the degree to which people's feelings carry over from one moment to the next—is an...
Emotional inertia—the degree to which people’s feelings carry over from one moment to the next—is an...
The autocorrelation or inertia of negative affect reflects how much negative emotions carry over fro...
Emotional inertia is a central feature of emotion dynamics and it refers to the degree to which emot...
Emotional inertia (the moment-to-moment persistence of emotional states) is an index of regulatory d...
The tendency for emotions to be predictable over time, labelled emotional inertia, has been linked t...
Emotional inertia refers to the degree to which a person’s current emotional state is predicted by t...
Emotional inertia refers to the extent to which emotional states are predictable over time and are r...
Negative emotional inertia refers to the degree of which a current emotional state can be predicted ...
Feelings change. People’s emotional lives are characterized by ups and downs, changes and fluctuatio...