In the present study, we provide direct evidence for effects of global versus local processing on responsiveness to and reliance on affective information in judgement and decision-making. Results of Experiments 1 and 2 showed an increased responsiveness to affective stimuli among participants in a global processing mode. Experiment 3 showed similar effects for processing fluency; participants adopting a global processing style showed an increased reliance on fluency. Experiment 4 replicated our findings in a more mundane judgement task in which participants judged apartments. We discuss our findings in relation to the distinction between intuitive versus deliberative modes of thinking
Processing fluency, or the subjective experience of ease with which people process information, reli...
We study the effects of experimental manipulation of decision mode (rational "brain" vs. affective "...
Processing fluency has been shown to have wide-ranging effects on disparate evaluative judgments, in...
Decisions and judgments made after deliberation can differ from expert opinion and be more regretted...
Previous findings on the relationship between positive mood and global process-ing are often based o...
Two studies tested the affect-as-cognitive-feedback model, in which positive and negative affective ...
The aim was to investigate the role of global and local processing style in perception, field (in)de...
The authors propose a global/local processing style model (GLOMO) for assimilation and contrast effe...
The effect of mood on global and local processing was studied in 60 undergraduate psychology student...
130 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1999.The experiment also examined ...
The past three decades have seen considerable debate about affect’s influence on judgment. In three ...
Over the past three decades research has overwhelmingly supported the notion that positive affect pr...
International audienceThis study aimed to provide evidence for a Global Precedence Effect (GPE) in b...
To simplify a judgment, people often base it on easily accessible information. One cue that is usual...
Past research demonstrates that mood can influence level of perceptual processing (global vs. local)...
Processing fluency, or the subjective experience of ease with which people process information, reli...
We study the effects of experimental manipulation of decision mode (rational "brain" vs. affective "...
Processing fluency has been shown to have wide-ranging effects on disparate evaluative judgments, in...
Decisions and judgments made after deliberation can differ from expert opinion and be more regretted...
Previous findings on the relationship between positive mood and global process-ing are often based o...
Two studies tested the affect-as-cognitive-feedback model, in which positive and negative affective ...
The aim was to investigate the role of global and local processing style in perception, field (in)de...
The authors propose a global/local processing style model (GLOMO) for assimilation and contrast effe...
The effect of mood on global and local processing was studied in 60 undergraduate psychology student...
130 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1999.The experiment also examined ...
The past three decades have seen considerable debate about affect’s influence on judgment. In three ...
Over the past three decades research has overwhelmingly supported the notion that positive affect pr...
International audienceThis study aimed to provide evidence for a Global Precedence Effect (GPE) in b...
To simplify a judgment, people often base it on easily accessible information. One cue that is usual...
Past research demonstrates that mood can influence level of perceptual processing (global vs. local)...
Processing fluency, or the subjective experience of ease with which people process information, reli...
We study the effects of experimental manipulation of decision mode (rational "brain" vs. affective "...
Processing fluency has been shown to have wide-ranging effects on disparate evaluative judgments, in...