20 research outputs found
I feel our pain: Antecedents and consequences of emotional self-stereotyping
a b s t r a c t According to Intergroup Emotions Theory people categorized as group members experience the emotions of their ingroup as a consequence of that membership. Four experiments showed that participants converged toward what they believed to be their specific ingroup's distinct emotional experience when reporting emotions as group members, but not when reporting emotions as individuals. Such self-stereotyping of ingroup emotions occurred for an experimentally fabricated ingroup as well as a range of naturally occurring groups. Demonstrating the roots of this process in categorization, self-stereotyping was increased when motivations to affiliate were amplified and was moderated by ingroup identification. The adoption of ingroup emotions changed participants' cognitive processing in a predictable way, demonstrating that emotional self-stereotyping involved the experience rather than merely the expression of group-based emotions. Self-stereotyping of ingroup emotions is thus one mechanism by which groupbased emotions are shared and can be changed
The impact of repetition-induced familiarity on agreement with weak and strong arguments
Repeated statements are perceived as more valid than novel ones, termed the illusion of truth effect,
presumably because repetition imbues the statement with familiarity. In 3 studies, the authors examined
the conditions under which and the processes by which familiarity signals from repetition and argument
quality signals from processing of message content influenced agreement with persuasive arguments.
Participants with low or high motivation to process information were presented persuasive arguments
seen once or twice. In all 3 studies, repetition increased the persuasiveness of weak and strong arguments
when little processing of message content occurred. Two of the studies used a process dissociation
procedure to reveal that both greater controlled processing (which reflected argument content) and the
greater automatic influence of familiarity (which reflected repetition) were associated with increased
acceptance of strong arguments but that greater controlled processing dissipated the benefits of familiarity
for agreement with weak arguments
The effect of negative affect on cognition: Anxiety, not anger, impairs executive function.
It is often assumed that negative affect impairs the executive functions that underlie our ability to control and focus our thoughts. However, support for this claim has been mixed. Recent work has suggested that different negative affective states like anxiety and anger may reflect physiologically separable states with distinct effects on cognition. However, the effects of these two affective states on executive function have never been assessed. As such, we induced anxiety or anger in participants and examined the effects on executive function. We found that anger did not impair executive function relative to a neutral mood, whereas anxiety did. In addition, self-reports of induced anxiety, but not anger, predicted impairments in executive function. These results support functional models of affect and cognition, and highlight the need to consider differences between anxiety and anger when investigating the influence of negative affect on fundamental cognitive processes such as memory and executive function
The Effect of Negative Affect on Cognition: Anxiety, Not Anger, Impairs Executive Function
It is often assumed that negative affect impairs the executive functions that underlie our ability to control and focus our thoughts. However, support for this claim has been mixed. Recent work has suggested that different negative affective states like anxiety and anger may reflect physiologically separable states with distinct effects on cognition. However, the effects of these 2 affective states on executive function have never been assessed. As such, we induced anxiety or anger in participants and examined the effects on executive function. We found that anger did not impair executive function relative to a neutral mood, whereas anxiety did. In addition, self-reports of induced anxiety, but not anger, predicted impairments in executive function. These results support functional models of affect and cognition, and highlight the need to consider differences between anxiety and anger when investigating the influence of negative affect on fundamental cognitive processes such as memory and executive function. (PsycINFO Database Recor
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Self-affirmation and affective forecasting: Affirmation reduces the anticipated impact of negative events
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Motivation to control prejudice predicts categorization of multiracials.
Multiracial individuals often do not easily fit into existing racial categories. Perceivers may adopt a novel racial category to categorize multiracial targets, but their willingness to do so may depend on their motivations. We investigated whether perceivers' levels of internal motivation to control prejudice (IMS) and external motivation to control prejudice (EMS) predicted their likelihood of categorizing Black-White multiracial faces as Multiracial. Across four studies, IMS positively predicted perceivers' categorizations of multiracial faces as Multiracial. The association between IMS and Multiracial categorizations was strongest when faces were most racially ambiguous. Explicit prejudice, implicit prejudice, and interracial contact were ruled out as explanations for the relationship between IMS and Multiracial categorizations. EMS may be negatively associated with the use of the Multiracial category. Therefore, perceivers' motivations to control prejudice have important implications for racial categorization processes