Mood and context-dependence: Positive mood increases and negative mood decreases the effects of context on perception. |
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Authors: | Avramova, Yana R. Stapel, Diederik A. Lerouge, Davy |
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Abstract: | ![]() Five studies show that mood affects context-dependence, such that negative mood promotes attention to a salient target, whereas positive mood enhances attention to both target and context. Judgments of temperature (Study 1), weight (Study 2), and size (Studies 3 and 4) were more strongly affected by the context in a positive than in a negative mood. Moreover, these effects extend to the social domain: When perceiving a target person's emotions, happy people were more influenced by the context than were sad people (Study 5). Thus, positive mood enhanced, and negative mood reduced, the magnitude of perceptual context effects. The results suggest that this pattern is not easily explained in terms of effort or depth of processing differences. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | context dependence mood perceptual context effects target judgment positive mood increase negative mood decrease |
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