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Mood-congruent cognitions constitute mood experience.
112
Citations
48
References
2005
Year
MusicCognitive SciencePsychopathologyMediation AnalysisEmotion RegulationAffective VariableAffective NeuroscienceMoodMood ExperienceDispositional TheorySocial SciencesExplicit ManipulationMood SpectrumMusic PsychologyExperimental PsychologyEmotionPsychologyEmotional Response
Three studies tested the assumption of a dispositional theory of moods that mood-related cognitions constitute essential parts of the phenomenal mood experience. In Study 1, after a hot- versus a cold-, sad-, or angry-mood induction, participants reported their momentary moods and their momentary mood-related cognitions. Self-reported moods and mood-related cognitions changed in a strictly parallel fashion in all mood induction groups. A mediation analysis showed that the influences of distraction on moods were completely mediated by changes in mood-related cognitions. Study 2 replicated the central findings of Study 1 with a musical mood induction procedure. Study 3 showed that the findings do not depend on the explicit manipulation of moods. The results support the tested assumption.
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