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The Role Of Meta-mood Experience On The Mood Congruency Effect In Recognizing Emotions From Facial ExpressionsKavcioglu, Fatih Cemil 01 September 2011 (has links) (PDF)
The aim of the current study was to investigate the roles of meta-mood experience on the mood congruency effect in recognizing emotions from neutral facial expressions. For this aim, three scales were translated and adapted to Turkish, namely Brief Mood Introspection Scale (BMIS), State Meta-Mood Scale (SMMS), and Trait Meta-Mood Scale (TMMS). The reliability and validity analyses came out to be satisfactory. For the main analyses, an experimental study was conducted. The experimental design consisted of the administration of the Brief Symptom Inventory, Pre- induction Brief Mood Introspection Scale, Trait Meta-MoodScale, and Basic Personality Traits Inventory in the first step, followed by a sad mood induction procedure and the administration of Post- Brief Symptom Inventory, and State Meta-Mood Scale in the second step. The last step consisted of the administration of the NimStim Set of Facial Expressions. For the main analyses regarding mood congruency only the
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mislabelings of neutral faces as sad or happy were considered. The results revealed that among personality traits Agreeableness was negatively associated with perceiving fast displayed neutral faces as sad. After controlling for personality traits / however, unpleasant mood measured before the mood induction procedure was positively associated with perceiving neutral faces as sad. When perceiving slow displayed neutral faces as happy were examined, it was found that anxiety was positively associated with such a bias. After controlling for symptomatology, among personality traits, extraversion and conscientiousness were found to be negatively associated with mislabelling slow displayed neutral faces as happy. Among the evaluative domain of the SMMS, typicality was found to be negatively associated with such a bias / and lastly, among the regulatory domain of the SMMS, emotional repair was found to be negatively associated with mislabelling slow displayed neutral faces as happy.
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The impact of mood, distance to the goal state, and filled mechanism on consumers' perceptions of waiting time and their affective responses.Lin, Yu-Wen 25 June 2003 (has links)
Consumers often have to wait during the process of acquiring and consuming many products and services. These waiting experiences are typically negative and have been known to affect customers¡¦ overall satisfaction with the product or service. To better manage these waiting experiences, many firms have instituted a variety of programs to reduce the actual duration of the wait. However, consumers are influenced by their perceptions of the waiting duration, not the actual one. Therefore, understanding how consumers perceive their waiting time is particularly important in the marketing of service.
In this paper, I use laboratory experiment method and examine the impact of mood, distance to the goal state, and filled mechanism on consumers¡¦ perceptions of waiting time and their affective responses. A total of 206 students recruited at the university participated in the study.
The results demonstrate that people in a positive mood tend to perceive shorter duration of the wait than those in a negative mood. Further, the distance to the goal state, i.e. the stage at which the delay occurs during the service encounter, has the impacts on consumers¡¦ time perception and affective responses. The delay produced longer time estimates and stronger affective responses at further from the goal state than at closer to the goal state. And filling time resulted in shorter time perception and less negative emotions. However, the relevance to the service of filled mechanism will not affect consumers¡¦ time estimates but only consumers¡¦ positive affective responses. The distance to the goal and different kind of filled mechanism have an interactive effect only on the time perceptions. Moreover, consumers¡¦ involvements toward service and time style have moderating effects. The higher the involvement, the longer the time estimates and the more negative responses. Qualitative subjects perceived longer waiting time, and quantitative ones have more positive affective responses.
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The reinforcing value of alcohol in a drinking to cope paradigmRousseau, Glenna S., Correia, Christopher J., January 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Auburn University, 2008. / Abstract. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (p. 49-59).
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Children and adolescents with mood disorders a review of literature /Hanke, Sarah K. January 2004 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis--PlanB (M.S.)--University of Wisconsin--Stout, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references.
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The effects of reversing sleep-Wake cycles on mood states, sleep, and fatigue on the crew of the USS John C. Stennis /Sawyer, Tiffoney L. January 2004 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S. in Applied Science (Operations Research))--Naval Postgraduate School, June 2004. / Thesis advisor(s): Nita Lewis Miller. Includes bibliographical references (p. 103-107). Also available online.
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The role of affective memories and mood in judgments of alcohol useSteiner, Scott MacKenzie 10 June 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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The role of mood in a physical activity task that requires self-controlCiccolo, Joseph Thomas, 1974- 10 August 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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Subliminal priming and mood : a preliminary study.Mansfield, Douglas John. January 1997 (has links)
The topic ofsubliminalperception (perception without awareness) is investigated in this thesis.
A technique of masking by visual noise was developed for use with an IBM-type
microcomputer and VGA screen. This technique was used to investigate whether subliminal
mood priming influences subjects' resolution oflexical ambiguity in a homophone task designed
by Halberstadt et al. (1995). Limited evidence was found for mood-congruent priming, but only
for negative emotional priming, and with the most strongly negative items. Some non-specific
effects were also found to be associated with negative mood priming. The mood-priming effect
was correlated with the negative emotional ratings of these items obtained from a separate
group ofsubjects. In a Follow-up study, a self-report mood scale was used to assess subjects'
reaction to both negative and positive subliminal stimuli. A pattern oftrends was found which
suggested that subjects experienced a paradoxical improvement in mood after exposure to the
negative stimulus. No changes were observed in the group exposed to the positive stimuli. A
theoretical explanation was entertained which suggested that subjects adaptively attributed their
change in affective arousal in terms of experimental demands. of A number ofrelationships to
recent research were suggested by these experiments, in particular the finding of a preattentive
bias for negative information in subjects with anxiety and non-clinical depression by Bradley
et al., (1994, 1995) and Mogg et al.,(1993). It is suggested that measures ofphysiological and
cortical arousal should receive attention in future research in order to clarify the response to
subliminal stimulation in terms of affective arousal. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 1997.
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Mood dependent memory : extension and validationMacaulay, Dawn Leigh 11 1900 (has links)
Recent studies have indicated stronger mood dependent memory (MDM) effects when
subjects generate both the to-be-remembered events and the cues used in their retrieval, and
when subjects who experience similar moods are compared to subjects who report a change in
both pleasure and arousal, rather than others who report a change in pleasure alone.
The first study was undertaken to experimentally evaluate the relationship between mood
change and memory performance. Specifically, four mood manipulations were developed to
compare memory performance in subjects assigned to no mood change, change in pleasure,
change in arousal, or change in both pleasure and arousal. Subjects generated autobiographical
events in response to neutral nouns, and were tested for free recall and recognition of these
events two days later. Results demonstrated greater memory disruption after change in both
pleasure and arousal than after change in pleasure alone. However, one-dimensional change in
arousal led to as much memory disruption as did change in both dimensions. Separate ANOVAs
compared each mood in combination with each other mood and indicated that MDM was more
strongly supported in some combinations than others. Further, the pattern in free recall was
different from the pattern in recognition indicating that MDM effects may vary interactively
across moods and tasks.
The second study was undertaken to validate prior research by employing subjects who
experience large, but naturally occurring, changes in mood. Patients with rapid-cycling Bipolar
Disorder performed a variety of tasks during study sessions and were tested for implicit and
explicit memory during test sessions. Significant MDM effects were supported in free recall of
autobiographical events and inkblot recognition, but not in implicit category production of
autobiographical event probes, picture fragment completion, explicit nor implicit memory for
letter associates. Results validate MDM as a real world phenomenon that impacts on explicit
memory performance in subjects whose moods are not manipulated.
Discussion centers on prospects for future studies that consider a wider range of
manipulated moods and tasks, theories of emotion, and other clinical groups in the investigation
of MDM.
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Depressive styles in adolescence : investigating psychosocial adjustment and daily mood regulationFichman, Laura. January 1997 (has links)
The increasing incidence of adolescent depression calls for the study of individual difference factors that may impinge on psychosocial adjustment. Researchers have identified depressive personality styles, namely dependency and self-criticism, that represent distinct vulnerability orientations. A series of four studies was conducted to (1) examine the relation of the depressive styles to adolescent dysphoria and interpersonal functioning; (2) assess the Personality-Event Congruence Model of Depressive Vulnerability in youngsters; and (3) explore how dependency and self-criticism relate to the regulation of negative affect using an experience sampling methodology. Findings provide evidence for heightened vulnerability of adolescent self-criticism in terms of increased dysphoria and interpersonal problems, demonstrate the vulnerability of dependency during attachment-related transitions, and reveal the relation of depressive styles to distinctive patterns of poor mood management. Together, these studies highlight the need to help youngsters adopt strategies that may be effective in forestalling dysphoria, enabling healthy adaptation to developmental challenges.
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