Publication | Closed Access
The Need for Affect: Individual Differences in the Motivation to Approach or Avoid Emotions
455
Citations
58
References
2001
Year
The study developed and tested a new individual‑difference measure of the need for affect, defined as the motivation to approach or avoid emotion‑inducing situations. The first phase of the research created the need for affect scale. The need for affect scale was found to correlate with various cognitive, emotional, behavioral, and personality traits, and individuals high in this need displayed more extreme attitudes, preferred emotional movies, and engaged in emotionally charged events, underscoring its importance for understanding emotion‑related processes.
The present research developed and tested a new individual‐difference measure of the need for affect, which is the motivation to approach or avoid emotion‐inducing situations. The first phase of the research developed the need for affect scale. The second phase revealed that the need for affect is related to a number of individual differences in cognitive processes (e.g., need for cognition, need for closure), emotional processes (e.g., affect intensity, repression‐sensitization), behavioral inhibition and activation (e.g., sensation seeking), and aspects of personality (Big Five dimensions) in the expected directions, while not being redundant with them. The third phase of the research indicated that, compared to people low in the need for affect, people high in the need for affect are more likely to (a) possess extreme attitudes across a variety of issues, (b) choose to view emotional movies, and (c) become involved in an emotion‐inducing event (the death of Princess Diana). Overall, the results indicate that the need for affect is an important construct in understanding emotion‐related processes.
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