Adults are capable of predicting their emotional reactions to possible future events. Nevertheless, they systematically overestimate the intensity of their future emotional reactions relative to how they feel when these events actually occur. The developmental origin of this ‘‘intensity bias” has not yet been examined. Two studies were conducted to test the intensity bias in preschool children. In the first study, 5-year-olds (N = 30) predicted how they would feel if they won or lost various games. Comparisons with subsequent self-reported feelings indicated that participants overestimated how sad they would feel to lose the games but did not overestimate their happiness from winning. The second study replicated this effect in another sampl...
peer reviewedDecades of research on affective forecasting have shown a persistent intensity bias—a s...
Often to the detriment of human decision making, people are prone to an impact bias when making affe...
We propose that affective forecasters overestimate the extent to which experienced hedonic responses...
People try to make decisions that will improve their lives and make them happy, and to do so, they r...
Decades of research on affective forecasting have shown a persistent intensity bias—a strong tendenc...
Causal illusions occur when people perceive a causal relation between two events that are actually u...
There is ample empirical evidence for an asymmetry in the way that adults use positive versus negati...
Studies of affective forecasting examine people’s ability to predict (forecast) their emotional (aff...
There is ample empirical evidence for an asymmetry in the way that adults use positive versus negati...
There is ample empirical evidence for an asymmetry in the way that adults use positive versus negati...
Many of our decisions are based on probabilistic information. While probability theory is a useful t...
ABSTRACT—People base many decisions on affective fore-casts, predictions about their emotional react...
People often predict they will experience more positive or more negative emotional reactions to upco...
Data set of Bahn, D., Vesker, M., Garcia Alanis, J. C., Schwarzer, G., & Kauschke, C. (in press). Ag...
When we study optimism in children, we note the temporary emergence of a bias that leads them to mak...
peer reviewedDecades of research on affective forecasting have shown a persistent intensity bias—a s...
Often to the detriment of human decision making, people are prone to an impact bias when making affe...
We propose that affective forecasters overestimate the extent to which experienced hedonic responses...
People try to make decisions that will improve their lives and make them happy, and to do so, they r...
Decades of research on affective forecasting have shown a persistent intensity bias—a strong tendenc...
Causal illusions occur when people perceive a causal relation between two events that are actually u...
There is ample empirical evidence for an asymmetry in the way that adults use positive versus negati...
Studies of affective forecasting examine people’s ability to predict (forecast) their emotional (aff...
There is ample empirical evidence for an asymmetry in the way that adults use positive versus negati...
There is ample empirical evidence for an asymmetry in the way that adults use positive versus negati...
Many of our decisions are based on probabilistic information. While probability theory is a useful t...
ABSTRACT—People base many decisions on affective fore-casts, predictions about their emotional react...
People often predict they will experience more positive or more negative emotional reactions to upco...
Data set of Bahn, D., Vesker, M., Garcia Alanis, J. C., Schwarzer, G., & Kauschke, C. (in press). Ag...
When we study optimism in children, we note the temporary emergence of a bias that leads them to mak...
peer reviewedDecades of research on affective forecasting have shown a persistent intensity bias—a s...
Often to the detriment of human decision making, people are prone to an impact bias when making affe...
We propose that affective forecasters overestimate the extent to which experienced hedonic responses...