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Weeping: Evidence for a cognitive theory
Authors:Dr. Susan M. Labott  Randall B. Martin
Affiliation:(1) Department of Psychology, University of Toledo, 2801 W. Bancroft, 43606 Toledo, Ohio;(2) Northern Illinois University, USA
Abstract:According to a two-factor cognitive theory of weeping, schema-incongruent information and efforts to assimilate it create arousal; resolution, giving up of the schema, and cessation of the assimilation efforts result in arousal reduction and may be associated with emotional tears. To assess these predictions, female subjects were shown an emotional film under one of two conditions. In one condition only schema-induction and incongruity phases were viewed, while the other condition viewed the complete film (i.e., schema-induction, incongruity, and resolution). Consistent with expectations, incongruity was associated with increased stress and depressed mood. Only subjects who viewed the complete film reported significant decreases in these states. The final scene, assumed to trigger schema change, produced the greatest amount of weeping.This paper is adapted from a portion of a doctoral dissertation conducted by the first author. We gratefully acknowledge the assistance of Walter Katkovsky and Raymond Ditrichs. A version of this paper was presented at a meeting of the Western Psychological Association, May 1986.
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