Authors
Daniel T Gilbert, Elizabeth C Pinel, Timothy D Wilson, Stephen J Blumberg, Thalia P Wheatley
Publication date
1998/9
Journal
Journal of personality and social psychology
Volume
75
Issue
3
Pages
617
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
People are generally unaware of the operation of the system of cognitive mechanisms that ameliorate their experience of negative affect (the psychological immune system), and thus they tend to overestimate the duration of their affective reactions to negative events. This tendency was demonstrated in 6 studies in which participants overestimated the duration of their affective reactions to the dissolution of a romantic relationship, the failure to achieve tenure, an electoral defeat, negative personality feedback, an account of a child's death, and rejection by a prospective employer. Participants failed to distinguish between situations in which their psychological immune systems would and would not be likely to operate and mistakenly predicted overly and equally enduring affective reactions in both instances. The present experiments suggest that people neglect the psychological immune system when making affective …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
DT Gilbert, EC Pinel, TD Wilson, SJ Blumberg… - Journal of personality and social psychology, 1998