Affect and impression formation : influence of mood on person memory.

Author(s)
Asuncion, A.G. & Lam, W.F.
Year
Abstract

Two experiments were conducted to examine the effects of mood on person memory. Subjects in a happy, sad, or neutral mood read impression congruent, incongruent, and irrelevant behavioral information about a target person and were later asked to recall as many of the behaviors as they could. In both experiments, only subjects in a neutral mood recalled impression-incongruent information at a higher probability than congruent information, replicating previous person memory research. However, neither happy nor sad subjects showed a recall advantage for incongruent information. These results suggest that induced affect apparently disrupted the type of elaborative processing necessary to produce the incongruency effect. (A)

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Publication

Library number
C 6706 [electronic version only] /01 /
Source

Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, Vol. 31 (1995), No. 5 (September), p. 437-464, 45 ref.

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