דילוג לניווט ראשי דילוג לחיפוש דילוג לתוכן הראשי

Feeling happy and (over)confident: the role of positive affect in metacognitive processes

פרסום מחקרי: פרסום בכתב עתמאמרביקורת עמיתים

תקציר

The relationship between affect and metacognitive processes has been largely overlooked in both the affect and the metacognition literatures. While at the core of many affect-cognition theories is the notion that positive affective states lead people to be more confident, few studies systematically investigated how positive affect influences confidence and strategic behaviour. In two experiments, when participants were free to control answer interval to general knowledge questions (e.g. question: “in what year”, answer: “it was between 1970 and 1985”), participants induced with positive affect outperformed participants in a neutral affect condition. However, in Experiment 1 positive affect participants showed larger overconfidence than neutral affect participants. In Experiment 2, enhanced salience of social cues eliminated this overconfidence disadvantage of positive affect relative to neutral affect participants, without compromising their enhanced performance. Notably, in both experiments, positive affect led to compromised social norms regarding the answers’ informativeness. Implications for both affect and metacognition are discussed.

שפה מקוריתאנגלית
עמודים (מ-עד)876-884
מספר עמודים9
כתב עתCognition and Emotion
כרך32
מספר גיליון4
מזהי עצם דיגיטלי (DOIs)
סטטוס פרסוםפורסם - 19 מאי 2018
פורסם באופן חיצוניכן

הערה ביבליוגרפית

Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.

טביעת אצבע

להלן מוצגים תחומי המחקר של הפרסום 'Feeling happy and (over)confident: the role of positive affect in metacognitive processes'. יחד הם יוצרים טביעת אצבע ייחודית.

פורמט ציטוט ביבליוגרפי