Self-structure and emotional experience |
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Authors: | Christopher P. Ditzfeld Carolin J. Showers |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychological Science, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR, USAcditzfe@uark.edu or cshowers@ou.edu;3. Department of Psychology, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK, USA |
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Abstract: | Two studies examine individual differences in affective reactivity by linking emotional experience to cognitive self-structure. Consistent with the view that individuals with an evaluative compartmentalised self-structure are emotionally reactive, we find that evaluative compartmentalisation is associated with the experience of, and desire for, high-arousal positive (HAP) affect, whereas evaluative integration is associated with the experience of low-arousal positive (LAP) and low-arousal negative affect and the desire for LAP affect. Although compartmentalised individuals are less granular in their tendency to report experiencing both HAP and LAP, they are strongly differentiated in their perceptions of high-arousal states as positive and low-arousal states as negative. Thus, compartmentalised individuals' reactivity may be explained by their preference for HAP states and the ‘breadth’ of their emotionality (e.g., the tendency to experience sadness and nervousness at the same time). |
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Keywords: | Self-knowledge Self-structure Arousal Affect valuation Emotional granularity |
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