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Predicting the duration of emotional experience: Two experience sampling studies.
Author(s) -
Philippe Verduyn,
Ellen Delvaux,
Hermina Van Coillie,
Francis Tuerlinckx,
Iven Van Mechelen
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
emotion
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.261
H-Index - 140
eISSN - 1931-1516
pISSN - 1528-3542
DOI - 10.1037/a0014610
Subject(s) - psychology , sadness , gratitude , anger , rumination , experience sampling method , trait , developmental psychology , duration (music) , cognitive psychology , social psychology , cognition , art , literature , neuroscience , computer science , programming language
The authors present 2 studies to explain the variability in the duration of emotional experience. Participants were asked to report the duration of their fear, anger, joy, gratitude, and sadness episodes on a daily basis. Information was further collected with regard to potential predictor variables at 3 levels: trait predictors, episode predictors, and moment predictors. Discrete-time survival analyses revealed that, for all 5 emotions under study, the higher the importance of the emotion-eliciting situation and the higher the intensity of the emotion at onset, the longer the emotional experience lasts. Moreover, a reappearance, either physically or merely mentally, of the eliciting stimulus during the emotional episode extended the duration of the emotional experience as well. These findings display interesting links with predictions within N. H. Frijda's theory of emotion, with the phenomenon of reinstatement (as studied within the domain of learning psychology), and with the literature on rumination.

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