The intensity of positive affect elicited by recall of positive events exceeds the intensity of negative affect elicited by recall of negative events (fading affect bias, or FAB). The research described in the present article examined the relation between the FAB and three regulatory goals of the self: esteem, continuity and meaningfulness. The extent to which an event contributed to esteem (Study 1), continuity (Study 2) or meaningfulness (Study 3) was related to positive affect at event recall provoked by positive memories and to negative affect at event recall provoked by negative memories. The relation between affect experienced at recall and the three regulatory goals was bidirectional. The results showcase how individuals use recall f...
The current research challenges the widespread truism that recalling a positive self necessarily inc...
The current research challenges the widespread truism that recalling a positive self necessarily inc...
The current research challenges the widespread truism that recalling a positive self necessarily inc...
Prior research suggests that the negative affect associated with autobiographical memories fades fas...
Prior research indicates that people call on autobiographical memories to serve social, self-related...
This article presents two studies that investigated the impact of the retrieval of self-defining mem...
This article presents two studies that investigated the impact of the retrieval of self-defining mem...
Two studies examined whether global self-esteem was associated with bias in memory for autobiographi...
Two studies examined whether global self-esteem was associated with bias in memory for autobiographi...
The affect associated with negative (or unpleasant) memories typically tends to fade faster than the...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [68]-72).The present studies examined the fading affect b...
The affect associated with negative (or unpleasant) memories typically tends to fade faster than the...
People's self-images are grounded in autobiographical memories and, in particular, in the phenomenol...
The current research challenges the widespread truism that recalling a positive self necessarily inc...
The current research challenges the widespread truism that recalling a positive self necessarily inc...
The current research challenges the widespread truism that recalling a positive self necessarily inc...
The current research challenges the widespread truism that recalling a positive self necessarily inc...
The current research challenges the widespread truism that recalling a positive self necessarily inc...
Prior research suggests that the negative affect associated with autobiographical memories fades fas...
Prior research indicates that people call on autobiographical memories to serve social, self-related...
This article presents two studies that investigated the impact of the retrieval of self-defining mem...
This article presents two studies that investigated the impact of the retrieval of self-defining mem...
Two studies examined whether global self-esteem was associated with bias in memory for autobiographi...
Two studies examined whether global self-esteem was associated with bias in memory for autobiographi...
The affect associated with negative (or unpleasant) memories typically tends to fade faster than the...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [68]-72).The present studies examined the fading affect b...
The affect associated with negative (or unpleasant) memories typically tends to fade faster than the...
People's self-images are grounded in autobiographical memories and, in particular, in the phenomenol...
The current research challenges the widespread truism that recalling a positive self necessarily inc...
The current research challenges the widespread truism that recalling a positive self necessarily inc...
The current research challenges the widespread truism that recalling a positive self necessarily inc...
The current research challenges the widespread truism that recalling a positive self necessarily inc...
The current research challenges the widespread truism that recalling a positive self necessarily inc...