Affecting Others: Social Appraisal and Emotion Contagion in Everyday Decision Making

In a diary study of interpersonal affect transfer, 41 participants reported on decisions involving other people over 3 weeks. Reported anxiety and excitement were reliably related to the perceived anxiety and excitement of another person who was present during decision making. Risk and importance appraisals partially mediated effects of other's anxiety on own anxiety as predicted by social appraisal theory. However, other's emotion remained a significant independent predictor of own emotion after controlling for appraisals, supporting the additional impact of more direct forms of affect transfer such as emotion contagion. Significant affect-transfer effects remained even after controlling for participants' perceptions of the other's emotion in addition to all measured appraisals, confirming that affect transfer does not require explicit registration of someone else's feelings. This research provides some of the clearest evidence for the operation of both social appraisal and automatic affect transfer in everyday social life.

[1]  S. Schachter The Psychology Of Affiliation , 1959 .

[2]  B. Latané,et al.  Group inhibition of bystander intervention in emergencies. , 1968, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[3]  I. Ajzen,et al.  Attitude-behavior relations: A theoretical analysis and review of empirical research. , 1977 .

[4]  G. Bower Mood and memory. , 1981, The American psychologist.

[5]  S. Feinman,et al.  Social referencing at ten months: a second-order effect on infants' responses to strangers. , 1983, Child development.

[6]  A. Isen,et al.  Toward understanding the role of affect in cognition. , 1984 .

[7]  J. Campos,et al.  Maternal emotional signaling: Its effect on the visual cliff behavior of 1-year-olds. , 1985 .

[8]  D. A. Kenny,et al.  The moderator-mediator variable distinction in social psychological research: conceptual, strategic, and statistical considerations. , 1986, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[9]  W. T. Singleton,et al.  Risk and decisions , 1987 .

[10]  Megan R. Gunnar,et al.  The effects of maternal positive, neutral and negative affective communications on infant responses to new toys , 1987 .

[11]  R. Zajonc,et al.  Facial efference and the experience of emotion. , 1989, Annual review of psychology.

[12]  L. Wheeler,et al.  Self‐Recording of Everyday Life Events: Origins, Types, and Uses , 1991 .

[13]  P. Ellsworth,et al.  Beyond simple pessimism: effects of sadness and anger on social perception. , 1993, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[14]  K. Scherer Neuroscience projections to current debates in emotion psychology , 1993 .

[15]  D. Cicchetti Emotion and Adaptation , 1993 .

[16]  Craig A. Smith,et al.  Appraisal components, core relational themes, and the emotions , 1993 .

[17]  R. Kessler The interplay of research design strategies and data analysis procedures in evaluating the effects of stress on health. , 1995 .

[18]  E. Hatfield,et al.  Emotional Contagion , 1995 .

[19]  Ben Fletcher,et al.  Taking work home : A study of daily fluctuations in work stressors, effects on moods and impacts on marital partners , 1996 .

[20]  D. L. Mumme,et al.  Infants' responses to facial and vocal emotional signals in a social referencing paradigm. , 1996, Child development.

[21]  R. Doherty The Emotional Contagion Scale: A Measure of Individual Differences , 1997 .

[22]  P. Totterdell Catching moods and hitting runs: mood linkage and subjective performance in professional sport teams. , 2000, The Journal of applied psychology.

[23]  F. Strack,et al.  "Mood contagion": the automatic transfer of mood between persons. , 2000, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[24]  G. Robert J. Hockey,et al.  Effects of negative mood states on risk in everyday decision making , 2000 .

[25]  Yuk Fai Cheong,et al.  HLM 6: Hierarchical Linear and Nonlinear Modeling , 2000 .

[26]  Sigal G. Barsade,et al.  Mood and Emotions in Small Groups and Work Teams , 2001 .

[27]  Daniel J. Barrett,et al.  An Introduction to Computerized Experience Sampling in Psychology , 2001 .

[28]  Christopher K. Hsee,et al.  Risk as Feelings , 2001, Psychological bulletin.

[29]  A. Manstead,et al.  Social appraisal: the social world as object of and influence on appraisal processes , 2001 .

[30]  K. Scherer,et al.  Appraisal processes in emotion: Theory, methods, research. , 2001 .

[31]  Sigal G. Barsade The Ripple Effect: Emotional Contagion and its Influence on Group Behavior , 2002 .

[32]  Sunny Consolvo,et al.  Using the Experience Sampling Method to Evaluate Ubicomp Applications , 2003, IEEE Pervasive Comput..

[33]  H. Joffe Risk: from perception to social representation. , 2003, The British journal of social psychology.

[34]  C. Anderson,et al.  Emotional convergence between people over time. , 2003, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[35]  G. Bonanno,et al.  Brief Report The coherence of emotion systems: Comparing “on‐line” measures of appraisal and facial expressions, and self‐report , 2004 .

[36]  J. Campos,et al.  The retention effects of an adult's emotional displays on infant behavior. , 2004, Child development.

[37]  Agneta H. Fischer,et al.  Emotional assimilation: How we are influenced by others' emotions , 2004 .

[38]  Gerben A. van Kleef,et al.  Power and emotion in negotiation: Power moderates the interpersonal effects of anger and happiness on concession making , 2006 .

[39]  L. Tiedens,et al.  Get mad and get more than even : When and why anger expression is effective in negotiations , 2006 .

[40]  A. Bechara,et al.  The role of emotion in decision making: A cognitive neuroscience perspective , 2006 .

[41]  Remus Ilies,et al.  Explaining affective linkages in teams: individual differences in susceptibility to contagion and individualism-collectivism. , 2007, The Journal of applied psychology.

[42]  H. Bruch,et al.  The positive group affect spiral: a dynamic model of the emergence of positive affective similarity in work groups , 2008 .

[43]  D. Stapel,et al.  Emotion Elicitor or Emotion Messenger? , 2008, Psychological science.