Title of article
How do you feel now? On the perceptual distortion of extremely recent changes in anger
Author/Authors
Lambert، نويسنده , , Alan J. and Peak، نويسنده , , Stephanie A. and Eadeh، نويسنده , , Fade R. and Schott، نويسنده , , John Paul، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
14
From page
82
To page
95
Abstract
Previous research on retrospective biases in emotion has been largely concerned with mistakes that are made when people are asked to recall temporally distant affective experiences (e.g. those that occurred weeks or months ago). However, far less is known about peopleʹs abilities to accurately track extremely recent shifts in affective experience. Across three experiments, we show that people consistently distort perception of a very recent change in anger after being reminded of a historical act of revenge (i.e. the assassination of Osama bin Laden). Consistent with the implications of the “revenge paradox” (Carlsmith, Wilson, & Gilbert, 2008) these reminders made participants more angry. However, participants believed that this act of revenge had made them less angry—the exact opposite of what happened—provided that their psychological allegiance to the ingroup had been primed. We discuss the implications of our findings in previous research on the interconnections between emotional experience and social categorization processes (Mackie, Maimer, & Smith, 2009), as well as the role of revenge in protecting the interests of the ingroup (Fehr & Gachter, 2002).
Keywords
Revenge , Retrospective bias , Affective forecasting , Anger , Ingroup
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Record number
1961456
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