Authors
Maya Tamir, Chi-Yue Chiu, James J Gross
Publication date
2007/8
Journal
Emotion
Volume
7
Issue
3
Pages
546
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
It is widely accepted that emotions have utilitarian as well as hedonic consequences. Nevertheless, it is typically assumed that individuals regulate emotions to obtain hedonic, rather than utilitarian, benefits. In this study, the authors tested whether individuals represent the utility of pleasant and unpleasant emotions and whether they would be motivated to experience unpleasant emotions if they believed they could be useful. First, findings revealed that participants explicitly viewed approach emotions (eg, excitement) as useful for obtaining rewards, but viewed avoidance emotions (eg, worry) as useful for avoiding threats. Second, this pattern was replicated in implicit representations of emotional utility, which were dissociated from explicit ones. Third, implicit, but not explicit, representations of emotional utility predicted motives for emotion regulation. When anticipating a threatening task, participants who viewed …
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