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Related Concept Videos

Role of Affect in Interpersonal Attraction01:24

Role of Affect in Interpersonal Attraction

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Affect plays a crucial role in shaping interpersonal evaluations and perceptions. Emotions influence how individuals judge and respond to others, often determining whether interactions are viewed positively or negatively. This effect can manifest directly through interactions with the person in question or indirectly via associations with unrelated emotional experiences.Direct Effects of Affect on AttractionAffect directly influences interpersonal attraction when a person’s behavior...
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The Influence of Affect on Cognition01:29

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Positive affect significantly influences cognitive processes, including evaluation, memory, creativity, and social judgments. Compared to negative affect, positive emotional states promote more favorable interpretations of stimuli, cognitive flexibility, and heuristic processing. These effects highlight emotions' powerful role in shaping how individuals perceive, remember, and interact with the world.Influence on Evaluation and AttributionWhen individuals experience positive affect, they are...
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The Influence of Cognition on Affect01:29

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Cognition plays a pivotal role in shaping emotional experiences, as demonstrated by Schachter and Singer’s two-factor theory of emotion. According to this model, emotion arises from a combination of physiological arousal and cognitive interpretation. The body’s physiological response to stimuli is ambiguous and only gains emotional significance through cognitive labeling. For instance, an increased heart rate and adrenaline surge while standing near an attractive person may be...
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Factors Affecting Perception01:25

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Perception is influenced by perceptual set, context, motivation, and emotion. Perceptual set, or perceptual expectancy, refers to the tendency to perceive things in a particular way, influenced by previous experiences and expectations. This phenomenon affects the interpretation of stimuli, creating a set of mental tendencies and assumptions that impact sensory perceptions of sound, taste, touch, and sight.
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Fundamental Attribution Error01:14

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According to some social psychologists, people tend to overemphasize internal factors as explanations—or attributions—for the behavior of other people. They tend to assume that the behavior of another person is a trait of that person, and to underestimate the power of the situation on the behavior of others. They tend to fail to recognize when the behavior of another is due to situational variables, and thus to the person’s state. This erroneous assumption is...
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Cause and Effect01:53

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While variables are sometimes correlated because one does cause the other, it could also be that some other factor, a confounding variable, is actually causing the systematic movement in our variables of interest. For instance, as sales in ice cream increase, so does the overall rate of crime. Is it possible that indulging in your favorite flavor of ice cream could send you on a crime spree? Or, after committing crime do you think you might decide to treat yourself to a cone?
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Nov 3, 2025

Using Facial Electromyography to Assess Facial Muscle Reactions to Experienced and Observed Affective Touch in Humans
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The trouble with affect.

Ruth Leys1

  • 1Johns Hopkins University.

History of Psychology
|June 3, 2021
PubMed
Summary

This study examines the anti-intentionist theory of emotions, questioning the idea of discrete, universal affects triggered by evolved "affect programs." Evidence for this theory is inadequate, raising significant concerns.

Area of Science:

  • Psychology
  • Neuroscience
  • Emotion Theory

Background:

  • Theories of emotion often conceptualize affects as discrete, universal states.
  • The anti-intentionist view posits that affects arise from evolved
  • affect programs
  • triggering involuntary physiological and behavioral responses, including facial expressions.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To critically evaluate the evidence supporting the anti-intentionist theory of affect.
  • To explore the problematic implications of theorizing emotions as involuntary, discrete affect programs.
  • To discuss the limitations of current emotion theories.

Main Methods:

  • Literature review and theoretical analysis.
  • Examination of empirical evidence related to emotion theories.

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  • Critical appraisal of the anti-intentionist framework.
  • Main Results:

    • The evidence supporting the theory of discrete, universal affects driven by evolved affect programs is insufficient.
    • The involuntary nature of affect programs and their characteristic manifestations, such as facial expressions, is questioned.
    • The theoretical underpinnings and implications of this emotion model present significant challenges.

    Conclusions:

    • The anti-intentionist theory of affect, as currently formulated, lacks adequate empirical support.
    • Alternative theoretical frameworks may be necessary to fully understand the complexity of human emotions.
    • Further research is needed to address the limitations and troubling implications of the affect program theory.