Same situation--Different emotions: How appraisals shape our emotions. |
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Authors: | Siemer, Matthias Mauss, Iris Gross, James J. |
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Abstract: | Appraisal theories of emotion hold that it is the way a person interprets a situation--rather than the situation itself--that gives rise to one emotion rather than another emotion (or no emotion at all). Unfortunately, most prior tests of this foundational hypothesis have simultaneously varied situations and appraisals, making an evaluation of this assumption difficult. In the present study, participants responded to a standardized laboratory situation with a variety of different emotions. Appraisals predicted the intensity of individual emotions across participants. In addition, subgroups of participants with similar emotional response profiles made comparable appraisals. Together, these findings suggest that appraisals may be necessary and sufficient to determine different emotional reactions toward a particular situation. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | emotion appraisal |
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