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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Previous research shows that the experience of
familiarity involves the experience of positive affect. In
two experiments we clarify and extend this research by
showing that the experience of familiarity involves the
experience of positive affect even when the nature of the
experimental task is non-affective and non-evaluative and
even when participants are actively performing other cognitive
operations—that the association of familiarity and
positive affect is not disrupted by (non-affective and nonevaluative)
judgments regardless of whether familiarity
does or does not play a role in those judgments. Experiment
1 used a non-affective but evaluative task and
Experiment 2 a completely non-evaluative task. Both
studies manipulated familiarity through re-exposure and
showed that processing familiar stimuli induced a pleasurable
subjective experience.
Description
Keywords
Familiarity Affect Mood Positivity
Citation
Motivation and Emotion. doi:10.1007/s11031-016-9555-9
Publisher
Springer