Literature DB >> 26669691

Implicit happiness and sadness are associated with ease and difficulty: evidence from sequential priming.

Ruta Lasauskaite1, Guido H E Gendolla2, Mylène Bolmont1, Laure Freydefont1.   

Abstract

Three experiments tested the hypothesis of implicit associations between happiness and the performance ease concept and between sadness and the performance difficulty concept. All three studies applied a sequential priming paradigm: participants categorized emotion words (Experiment 1) or facial expressions (Experiment 2) as positive or negative or as referring to ease or difficulty (Experiment 3). These targets were preceded by briefly flashed ease- or difficulty-related words or neutral non-words (Experiments 1 and 2) or by happy, sad, or neutral facial expressions (Experiment 3) as primes. As predicted, all three experiments revealed increases in reaction times in the sequential priming task from congruent trials (happiness/ease and sadness/difficulty) over neutral trials to incongruent trials (sadness/ease and happiness/difficulty). The findings provide evidence for implicit associative links of happiness with ease and sadness with difficulty, as posited by the implicit-affect-primes-effort model (Gendolla, Int J Psychophysiol 86:123-135, 2012; Soc Pers Psychol Compass 9:606-619, 2015).

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26669691     DOI: 10.1007/s00426-015-0732-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Res        ISSN: 0340-0727


  24 in total

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7.  Masked affective stimuli moderate task difficulty effects on effort-related cardiovascular response.

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8.  Affect, cognition, and awareness: affective priming with optimal and suboptimal stimulus exposures.

Authors:  S T Murphy; R B Zajonc
Journal:  J Pers Soc Psychol       Date:  1993-05

Review 9.  Implicit social cognition: from measures to mechanisms.

Authors:  Brian A Nosek; Carlee Beth Hawkins; Rebecca S Frazier
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10.  Non-conscious visual cues related to affect and action alter perception of effort and endurance performance.

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  1 in total

1.  Task choice shields against incidental affective influences on effort-related cardiovascular response.

Authors:  Johanna R Falk; Peter M Gollwitzer; Gabriele Oettingen; Guido H E Gendolla
Journal:  Psychophysiology       Date:  2022-02-15       Impact factor: 4.348

  1 in total

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