The effects of diffuse and distinct affect. |
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Authors: | Stapel, Diederik A. Koomen, Willem Ruys, Kirsten I. |
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Abstract: | ![]() In a series of suboptimal priming studies, it was shown that both affective and nonaffective reactions to a stimulus may occur without awareness. Moreover, it was demonstrated that affective information is detected earlier than nonaffective information. Therefore, early reactions to an affect-laden stimulus (e.g., a smiling man) are cognitively unappraised and thus diffuse (e.g., "positive"), whereas later affective reactions can be more specific and distinct (e.g., "a smiling man"). Through variations of prime exposure (extremely short, moderately short) the impact of early diffuse and late distinct affect on judgment was investigated. Findings show that distinctness (and prime-target similarity) is an essential determinant of whether the effect of affect is null, assimilation, or contrast. Furthermore, whether affect priming activates diffuse or distinct reactions is a matter of a fraction of seconds. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | early diffuse affect late distinct affect affective & nonaffective reactions prime exposure priming judgment facial features cognitions emotions |
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