Results 311 to 320 of about 1,374,613 (337)
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British Journal of Social Psychology, 1988
This study examined the impact of subjects' moods on their compliance with simple messages. It was predicted and found that recipients of messages: (1) complied more when in a happy mood than when in a neutral state, and (2) complied less when in an angry mood than when in a neutral state.
Margaret S. Clark, Sandra J. Milberg
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This study examined the impact of subjects' moods on their compliance with simple messages. It was predicted and found that recipients of messages: (1) complied more when in a happy mood than when in a neutral state, and (2) complied less when in an angry mood than when in a neutral state.
Margaret S. Clark, Sandra J. Milberg
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Mental Health Practice, 2000
A number of specific nutrients and other active substances in foods are thought to have a direct impact on mood. Carol Ottley explores the evidence linking food with aspects of mood and behaviour. Areas covered include premenstrual syndrome, chocolate craving, mood swings, and how we eat in relation to specific mood states such as fear, happiness and ...
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A number of specific nutrients and other active substances in foods are thought to have a direct impact on mood. Carol Ottley explores the evidence linking food with aspects of mood and behaviour. Areas covered include premenstrual syndrome, chocolate craving, mood swings, and how we eat in relation to specific mood states such as fear, happiness and ...
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Issues in Mental Health Nursing, 2015
The relationship between mood and food is complex. Mood can influence the foods we choose to eat. Sometimes we hear friends or family saying that they were so stressed by events in their lives that their eating was out of control – either they overate or, less frequently, that they could not eat. Overeating when stressed is a common reaction. More than
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The relationship between mood and food is complex. Mood can influence the foods we choose to eat. Sometimes we hear friends or family saying that they were so stressed by events in their lives that their eating was out of control – either they overate or, less frequently, that they could not eat. Overeating when stressed is a common reaction. More than
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Are Real Moods Required to Reveal Mood-Congruent and Mood-Dependent Memory?
Psychological Science, 2000While simulating, or acting as if, they were either happy or sad, university students recounted emotionally positive, neutral, or negative events from their personal past. Two days later, subjects were asked to freely recall the gist of all of these events, and they did so while simulating a mood that either did or did not match the one they had ...
Eric Eich, Dawn Macaulay
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Scandinavian Journal of Psychology, 1979
Due to unfortunate choices of response scale and psychometric model earlier analyses of mood adjective check lists have given a confused and complex picture of the area. When an adequate response scale was applied and a simplex rather than a common factor analysis model was utilized it was found, in two empirical studies, that mood was possible to ...
Lars-Olof Persson+2 more
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Due to unfortunate choices of response scale and psychometric model earlier analyses of mood adjective check lists have given a confused and complex picture of the area. When an adequate response scale was applied and a simplex rather than a common factor analysis model was utilized it was found, in two empirical studies, that mood was possible to ...
Lars-Olof Persson+2 more
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This article describes experiments in which happy or sad moods were induced in subjects by hyp- notic suggestion to investigate the influence of emo- tions on memory and thinking. One result was that subjects exhibited mood-state-dependent memory in recall of word lists, personal experiences recorded in a daily diary, and childhood experiences; people ...
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The Journal of Psychology, 1975
In order to test (a) whether helping someone puts the helper in a better mood and (b) whether people in a good mood are more likely than controls to help with a task maintaining their positive mood but no more likely to help with a task leading to a negative mood, 80 female undergraduates participated in a study in which they (a) had an interaction ...
Robert J. Smith, Mary B. Harris
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In order to test (a) whether helping someone puts the helper in a better mood and (b) whether people in a good mood are more likely than controls to help with a task maintaining their positive mood but no more likely to help with a task leading to a negative mood, 80 female undergraduates participated in a study in which they (a) had an interaction ...
Robert J. Smith, Mary B. Harris
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New Formations, 2014
This essay explores the sociality of moods as a sociality that does not simply bring us together. Reflecting specifically on how attunement creates strangers (as those who are only dimly perceived) the essay explores how some have to work to become attuned to others.
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This essay explores the sociality of moods as a sociality that does not simply bring us together. Reflecting specifically on how attunement creates strangers (as those who are only dimly perceived) the essay explores how some have to work to become attuned to others.
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Moods as spotlights: The influence of mood on accessibility effects.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 2008Three studies explore the manner in which one's mood may affect the use and impact of accessible information on judgments. Specifically, the authors demonstrated that positive and negative moods differentially influence the direction of accessibility effects (assimilation, contrast) by determining whether abstract traits or concrete actor-trait links ...
Yana R. Avramova, Diederik A. Stapel
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Mood-dependent retrieval and mood awareness
Cognition & Emotion, 1991Abstract In six experiments, subjects were induced into happy or sad moods prior to studying a list of words, and then induced into either the same or different mood prior to freely recalling the list. In addition, subjects were administered various individual difference measures of mood states.
Timothy R. Grove+2 more
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