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Preferences for separating or combining events.
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Citations
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References
1991
Year
Negative EventsBehavioral Decision MakingAffective VariableChoice TheorySocial PsychologyEvent CorrelationIndividual Decision MakingSocial SciencesPsychologyExperimental Decision MakingEmotion RegulationImpactful EventsDecision TheoryRenewable Resources ModelEvent ProcessingBehavioral SciencesMotivationApplied Social PsychologyBehavioral EconomicsEvent EvaluationEmotion
This research investigates people's preferences for temporally separating or combining emotionally impactful events. For instance, do people prefer to experience 2 negative events (e.g., manuscript rejections) on the same day or on different days? Do people prefer to experience 2 positive events (e.g., manuscript acceptances) on the same or different days? This article proposes a renewable resources model that combines elements of decision-making models (prospect theory) with the notion that people possess limited but renewable physiological, cognitive, and social resources for dealing with emotionally impactful events. As predicted, Ss preferred to separate 2 positive events (the gain-savoring hypothesis), to separate 2 negative events (the multiple-loss-avoidance hypothesis), and to combine a positive and a negative event (the loss-buffering hypothesis). Ss displayed identical preferences for events from the academic, financial, and social domains.
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