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Source:2016 Release of Journal Citation Reports, Source: 2015 Web of Science Data

Affective Synchrony: Individual Differences in Mixed Emotions

  1. Eshkol Rafaeli
    1. Barnard College, Columbia University, erafaeli{at}barnard.columbia.edu
  1. Gregory M. Rogers
    1. University of Wisconsin-Madison
  1. William Revelle
    1. Northwestern University

Abstract

Most models of affect suggest either inverse or null associations between positivity and negativity. Recent work has highlighted situations that sometimes lead to mixed positive-negative affect. Focusing on the counterpart to these situational factors, the authors explore the individual-difference tendency toward mixed emotions, which they term affective synchrony. In five studies, the authors show that some individuals demonstrate affective synchrony (overlapping experience of positive and negative moods), others a-synchrony (positive and negative mood that fluctuate independently), and still others de-synchrony (positive and negative moods that function as bipolar opposites). These tendencies are stable over time within persons, vary broadly across individuals, and are associated with individual differences in cognitive representation of self and of emotions.

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This Article

  1. Pers Soc Psychol Bull vol. 33 no. 7 915-932
    All Versions of this Article:
    1. current version image indicatorVersion of Record - Jul 9, 2007
    2. 0146167207301009v1 - Jun 5, 2007
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