INFLUENCES OF HAPPY, SAD AND ANGRY MOODS ON THE PROCESSING OF PERSUASIVE COMMUNICATION

被引:0
|
作者
BOHNER, G
HAUSCHILDT, A
KNAUPER, B
机构
来源
ZEITSCHRIFT FUR SOZIALPSYCHOLOGIE | 1993年 / 24卷 / 02期
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Research on mood influences in persuasion has shown that people in a bad mood tend toward effortful, analytic processing strategies, whereas individuals in a good mood prefer simplifying, heuristic strategies. In various studies, subjects in a good mood did not (or insufficiently) take the quality of the presented arguments into account when forming an attitude judgment; subjects in a bad mood, however, were clearly more persuaded by strong than by weak arguments. The question whether more specific emotional states lead to differences in processing style has not been addressed empirically yet, although competing hypotheses may be derived from different theoretical approaches. In a first experiment addressing this issue, 64 subjects were put in a happy, sad, or angry mood, and subsequently exposed to strong or weak arguments advocating the fluoridation of drinking water. These arguments were simultaneously displayed in a diagram. Central dependent variables were subjects' attitudes, cognitive responses, and self-reported processing strategy. Angry subjects' attitudes were most strongly influenced by argument quality, happy subjects' attitudes least strongly, with the effect for sad subjects falling in between. The analysis of subjects' cognitive responses and processing strategies suggests different mediating processes under angry (as compared to sad) mood. One possible explanation for this finding may lie in diverging impact of anger on the process stages of encoding and judgment. Theoretical and methodological implications are discussed.
引用
收藏
页码:103 / 116
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Self-esteem modulates the ERP processing of emotional intensity in happy and angry faces
    Wang, Jianfeng
    Wu, Yan
    [J]. PLOS ONE, 2019, 14 (06):
  • [32] Spatiotemporal Dynamics of Covert Versus Overt Processing of Happy, Fearful and Sad Facial Expressions
    Maffei, Antonio
    Goertzen, Jennifer
    Jaspers-Fayer, Fern
    Kleffner, Killian
    Sessa, Paola
    Liotti, Mario
    [J]. BRAIN SCIENCES, 2021, 11 (07)
  • [33] Global-happy and local-sad: Perceptual processing affects emotion identification
    Srinivasan, Narayanan
    Hanif, Asma
    [J]. COGNITION & EMOTION, 2010, 24 (06) : 1062 - 1069
  • [34] Activation of the amygdala and interior cingulate during nonconscious processing of sad versus happy faces
    Killgore, WDS
    Yurgelun-Todd, DA
    [J]. NEUROIMAGE, 2004, 21 (04) : 1215 - 1223
  • [35] Beyond "happy, angry, or sad?": Age-of-poser and age-of-rater effects on multi-dimensional emotion perception
    Riediger, Michaela
    Voelkle, Manuel C.
    Ebner, Natalie C.
    Lindenberger, Ulman
    [J]. COGNITION & EMOTION, 2011, 25 (06) : 968 - 982
  • [36] CORPS: A Corpus of Tagged Political Speeches for Persuasive Communication Processing
    Guerini, Marco
    Strapparava, Carlo
    Stock, Oliviero
    [J]. JOURNAL OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY & POLITICS, 2008, 5 (01) : 19 - 32
  • [37] THE EFFECTS OF MOOD AND SOURCE STATUS ON THE IMPACT AND PROCESSING OF PERSUASIVE COMMUNICATION
    PAPASTAMOU, S
    HANTZI, A
    BOHNER, G
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 1992, 27 (3-4) : 286 - 286
  • [38] When sad is better than happy: Negative affect can improve the quality and effectiveness of persuasive messages and social influence strategies
    Forgas, Joseph P.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2007, 43 (04) : 513 - 528
  • [39] Neural correlates of affective processing in response to sad and angry facial stimuli in patients with major depressive disorder
    Lee, Byeong-Taek
    Seok, Jeong-Ho
    Lee, Boung-Chul
    Cho, Seong Whi
    Yoon, Bong-June
    Lee, Kyoung-Uk
    Chae, Jung-Ho
    Choi, Ihn-Geun
    Ham, Byung-Joo
    [J]. PROGRESS IN NEURO-PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY & BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY, 2008, 32 (03): : 778 - 785
  • [40] On being sad and evasive: Affective influences on verbal communication strategies in conflict situations
    Forgas, JP
    Cromer, M
    [J]. JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2004, 40 (04) : 511 - 518