| Literature DB >> 21660089 |
Camille S Johnson, Diederik A Stapel.
Abstract
People in a positive mood process information in ways that reinforce and maintain this positive mood. The current studies examine how positive mood influences responses to social comparisons and demonstrates that people in a positive mood interpret ambiguous information about comparison others in self-benefitting ways. Specifically, four experiments demonstrate that compared to negative mood or neutral mood participants, participants in a positive mood engage in effortful re-interpretations of ambiguously similar comparison targets so that they may assimilate to upward comparison targets and contrast from downward comparison targets.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21660089 PMCID: PMC3092942 DOI: 10.1007/s11031-011-9216-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Motiv Emot ISSN: 0146-7239
Fig. 1Social comparison processes in neutral and negative mood (with the extra steps associated with positive mood inside the shaded box)
Effects of upward (more attractive) versus downward (less attractive) comparisons on self-evaluations, ratings of target similarity, and use of information to benefit the self as a function of mood and shared birthday information
| Positive mood | Negative mood | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Same birthday | Different birthday | Same birthday | Different birthday | |||||
| Upward | Downward | Upward | Downward | Upward | Downward | Upward | Downward | |
| Self-evaluation | 5.25 (.93) | 5.53 (.52) | 3.17 (.98) | 5.13 (.72) | 3.33 (.90) | 5.20 (.68) | 3.07 (.62) | 5.35 (.70) |
From Experiment 2
Mean self-evaluations in the control condition were 4.20 with a standard deviation of .86. All self-evaluations differed from the control condition at p < .05
Effects of upward versus downward comparisons on self-evaluations and ratings of target similarity as function of mood and ambiguity of similarity information
| Positive | Neutral | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ambiguous | Unambiguous | Ambiguous | Unambiguous | |||||
| Upward | Downward | Upward | Downward | Upward | Downward | Upward | Downward | |
| Self-evaluation | 6.58 (.90) | 6.50 (.80) | 6.58 (.52) | 4.08 (.52) | 5.42 (.79) | 5.33 (.78) | 6.75 (.87) | 4.33 (.78) |
| Similarity | 7.06 (.53) | 4.14 (.59) | 6.81 (1.16) | 6.81 (.63) | 5.72 (.97) | 5.44 (.69) | 6.72 (.76) | 6.83 (.80) |
From Experiment 3
Fig. 2In the presence of ambiguous distinctiveness information, positive mood leads to more positive self-evaluations, across upward and downward comparisons, than does neutral mood (from Experiment 3)
Fig. 3Asymmetric responses to comparisons in positive mood are moderated by cognitive load; responses without mood induction are not. From Experiment 4