In search of the "hot" cognitions : attributions, appraisals, and their relation to emotion.

Author(s)
Smith, C.A. Haynes, K.N. Lazarus, R.S. & Pope, L.K.
Year
Abstract

Two studies examined the hypothesized status of appraisals, relative to attributions, as proximal antecedents of emotion. In Study 1, which looked at 6 emotions (happiness, hope-challenge, anger, guilt, fear-anxiety, and sadness), undergraduates (N=136) reported on their attributions, appraisals, and emotions during past encounters associated with a variety of situations. In Study 2, which was focused on anger and guilt, undergraduates (N=120) reported on these same variables in response to experimenter-supplied vignettes that systematically manipulated theoretically relevant attributions. The results of both studies indicated that the emotions were more directly related to appraisals than they were to attributions, and Study 2 provided evidence that appraisal serves as a mediator between attribution and emotional response. These findings lend support to the hypothesized status of appraisal as the most proximal cognitive antecedent of emotion. (A)

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Publication

Library number
C 7135 [electronic version only]
Source

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Vol. 65 (1993), No. 5 (November), p 916-929, 36 ref.

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