Affiliation:
1. University of California-San Diego,
2. University of Michigan
3. University of Wisconsin-Madison
Abstract
The authors explored three properties of basic, unconsciously triggered affective reactions: They can influence consequential behavior, they work without eliciting conscious feelings, and they interact with motivation. The authors investigated these properties by testing the influence of subliminally presented happy versus angry faces on pouring and consumption of beverage (Study 1), perception of beverage value (Study 2), and reports of conscious feelings (both studies). Consistent with incentive motivation theory, the impact of affective primes on beverage value and consumption was strongest for thirsty participants. Subliminal smiles caused thirsty participants to pour and consume more beverage (Study 1) and increased their willingness to pay and their wanting more beverage (Study 2). Subliminal frowns had the opposite effect. No feeling changes were observed, even in thirsty participants. The results suggest that basic affective reactions can be unconscious and interact with incentive motivation to influence assessment of value and behavior toward valenced objects.
Cited by
524 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
1. Stepping Back;The Edge of Sentience;2024-08-15
2. Large Language Models and the Gaming Problem;The Edge of Sentience;2024-08-15
3. Frontiers of Proportionality;The Edge of Sentience;2024-08-15
4. Pushing the Boundaries;The Edge of Sentience;2024-08-15
5. The Clearest Candidates;The Edge of Sentience;2024-08-15