Contact high: Mania proneness and positive perception of emotional touches |
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Authors: | Piff Paul K Purcell Amanda Gruber June Hertenstein Matthew J Keltner Dacher |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-5050, USA. paulpiff@gmail.com |
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Abstract: | How do extreme degrees of positive emotion-such as those characteristic of mania-influence emotion perception? The present study investigated how mania proneness, assessed using the Hypomanic Personality Scale, influences the perception of emotion via touch. Using a validated dyadic interaction paradigm for communicating emotion through touch (Hertenstein, Keltner, App, Bulleit, & Jaskolka, 2006), participants (N=53) received eight different touches to their forearm from a stranger and then identified the emotion via forced-choice methodology. Mania proneness predicted increased overall accuracy in touch perception, particularly for positive emotion touches, as well as the over-attribution of positive and under-attribution of negative emotions across all touches. These findings highlight the effects of positive emotion extremes on the perception of emotion in social interactions. |
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