Authors
Christopher Beedie, Peter Terry, Andrew Lane
Publication date
2005/9/1
Journal
Cognition and emotion
Volume
19
Issue
6
Pages
847-878
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Description
Most academics agree that emotions and moods are related but distinct phenomena. The present study assessed emotion-mood distinctions among a non-academic population and compared these views with distinctions proposed in the literature. Content analysis of responses from 106 participants identified 16 themes, with cause (65% of respondents), duration (40%), control (25%), experience (15%), and consequences (14%) the most frequently cited distinctions. Among 65 contributions to the academic literature, eight themes were proposed, with duration (62% of authors), intentionality (41%), cause (31percnt;), consequences (31%), and function (18%) the most frequently cited. When the eight themes cited by both academics and non-academics were rank ordered, approximately 60% overlap in opinion was evident. A data-derived summary of emotion-mood distinctions is provided. These data should prove …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
C Beedie, P Terry, A Lane - Cognition and emotion, 2005