8 results on '"Siegel, Jason T"'
Search Results
2. The predictive power of low-arousal positive affect
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McManus, Maria D., Siegel, Jason T., and Nakamura, Jeanne
- Published
- 2019
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3. Finding a family: A categorization of enjoyable emotions.
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Graham, Laura E., Thomson, Andrew L., Nakamura, Jeanne, Brandt, Irene A., and Siegel, Jason T.
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ANXIETY ,EMOTIONS ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,LOVE ,SELF-perception - Abstract
Responding to burgeoning scholarship examining discrete positive emotions, the overarching goals of the current review are to provide a summary of 28 enjoyable emotions and to offer an initial classification of these emotions into families. The families of discrete enjoyable emotions, many proposed for the first time, are as follows: (1) Self-praising emotions (authentic pride, fiero, naches, feeling respected), (2) other-praising emotions (admiration, elevation, gratitude, inspiration), (3) past-oriented emotions (forgiveness, nostalgia, relief), (4) future-oriented emotions (anticipatory enthusiasm, courage, determination, hope), (5) hazardous emotions (lust, schadenfreude, hubristic pride), (6) affectionate emotions (love, attachment love, tenderness, positive empathy), (7) arousal-defined emotions (euphoria, serenity), (8) violation-elicited emotions (amusement, awe, curiosity, positive surprise).This review describes how the 28 enjoyable emotions were selected, outlines the classification process generating the families of enjoyable emotions, provides a brief summary of current scholarship on each emotion, and concludes with a discussion of fertile future directions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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4. Elevation: A review of scholarship on a moral and other-praising emotion.
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Thomson, Andrew L. and Siegel, Jason T.
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EMOTIONS , *ETHICS , *SOCIAL skills , *SOCIAL responsibility - Abstract
The term elevation (also referred to as moral elevation), described by Thomas Jefferson and later coined by Jonathan Haidt, refers to the suite of feelings people may experience when witnessing an instance of moral beauty. The construct of elevation signifies the emotion felt when a person is a witness to, but not a recipient of, the moral behavior of others. Scholarship examining elevation has burgeoned since Haidt first introduced the construct. Researchers have explored the antecedents of, and outcomes associated with, witnessing instances of moral beauty. The current review will outline the existing scholarship on elevation, highlight conflicting findings, point out critical gaps in the current state of elevation research, and delineate fertile future directions for basic and applied research. Continued investigation of the affective, motivational, and behavioral responses associated with witnessing virtuous actions of others is warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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5. Positive emotion infusions of elevation and gratitude: Increasing help-seeking intentions among people with heightened levels of depressive symptomatology.
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Siegel, Jason T. and Thomson, Andrew L.
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THERAPEUTICS , *ATTRIBUTION (Social psychology) , *MENTAL depression , *EMOTIONS , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *HELP-seeking behavior , *POSITIVE psychology , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Three online studies assessed a new approach for increasing help seeking among people with depressive symptomatology (i.e. a positive emotion infusion, PEI). A PEI refers to the induction of positive emotion such that people’s mindsets – including perceptions of help-seeking – are temporarily altered. Study 1 (n = 382) indicated that help-seeking intentions are negatively correlated with depressive symptomatology and positively correlated with elevation and gratitude. Studies 2 and 3 implemented fully randomized experimental designs. In Study 2, two elevation-based (Study 2a, n = 285) and two gratitude-based (Study 2b, n = 338) emotion inductions increased levels of elevation and gratitude, respectively. Results of Study 3a (n = 390) indicate a causal relationship between experiencing the story-based elevation induction and increased help-seeking intentions. The two gratitude-based PEIs (Study 3b, n = 466) were unsuccessful at influencing help-seeking; auxiliary analyses indicate the possibility of iatrogenic effects. Overall, the potential of PEIs was indicated, as was need for caution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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6. Anger, frustration, boredom and the Department of Motor Vehicles: Can negative emotions impede organ donor registration?
- Author
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Siegel, Jason T., Tan, Cara N., Rosenberg, Benjamin D., Navarro, Mario A., Thomson, Andrew L., Lyrintzis, Elena A., Alvaro, Eusebio M., and Jones, Natalie D.
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ANGER , *ORGAN donation , *FRUSTRATION , *INTENTION , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *MOTOR vehicles , *ORGAN donors , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *ORGAN donor registries , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Rationale The IIFF Model (Information, Immediate and Complete Registration Mechanism, Focused Engagement, Favorable Activation) offers a checklist of considerations for interventions seeking to influence organ donor registration behavior. One aspect of the model, favorable activation, recommends considering the emotional and motivational state of a potential donor registrant. Given that most donor registrations occur at the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV), we considered whether emotions experienced while at the DMV could influence registration rates. Objective The current research effort investigated the emotions people experience while visiting the DMV, explored whether these emotions are associated with donor registration intentions, and experimentally assessed whether DMV experiences influence donor registration. Methods Three studies were conducted through Amazon's Mechanical Turk. In Study 1, we randomly assigned participants to either recall a prior DMV experience or to a comparison condition. Emotions associated with the recalled experiences were the dependent variable. Study 2 assessed the correlations between nine different emotions and donor registration intentions. Study 3 randomly assigned participants to recall a prior frustrating DMV experience or to a comparison condition. Intention to register to donate was the dependent variable. Results Study 1 found that recalling a prior DMV experience was associated with more negative and less positive emotions than the comparison condition. Study 2 found that increased levels of negative emotion could be problematic, as negative emotions were associated with decreased donor intentions. Study 3 found that recalling a frustrating DMV experience resulted in significantly lower intentions to register as an organ donor (vs. a control condition). Conclusion Although not all DMV experiences are negative, these data indicated a relationship between the DMV and negative emotions; an association between negative emotions and lower donor registration intentions; and, a causal relationship between negative DMV experiences and decreased registration intentions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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7. Experimentally distinguishing elevation from gratitude: Oh, the morality.
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Siegel, Jason T., Thomson, Andrew L., and Navarro, Mario A.
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ANALYSIS of covariance , *CHARITY , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *EMOTIONS , *GIFT giving , *SOCIAL support , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Elevation has garnered empirical support as the emotional response to witnessing moral beauty. The current studies investigated elevation’s construct validity by experimentally testing whether feelings of elevation are distinct from gratitude, another moral and ‘other-praising’ emotion. Study 1 demonstrated that feelings of elevation are distinct from gratitude, serenity (i.e. a secondary comparison condition), and boredom (i.e. a control condition). Study 2 added a behavioral outcome measure in the form of monetary donations to a moral charity. The third study expanded on Study 2 by randomly assigning participants to an elevation or gratitude mood induction and then randomly assigning them to have the opportunity to donate to either a moral or an amoral charity. Together, these studies support Haidt’s conceptualization of elevation, clarify Algoe and Haidt’s qualitative assessment of the emotional differences between elevation and gratitude, and reveal that elevation results in different behavioral responses than gratitude. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2014
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8. Increasing social support for women with postpartum depression through attribution theory guided vignettes and video messages: The understudied role of effort.
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Ruybal, Andrea L. and Siegel, Jason T.
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POSTPARTUM depression , *SOCIAL support , *VIGNETTES , *SYMPATHY , *VIDEOS - Abstract
Guided by Weiner's attribution theory of help-giving, two experimental studies assessed whether emphasizing the temporary nature of postpartum depression (PPD; i.e., stability), the uncontrollable development of the ailment (i.e., onset controllability), and whether it appears someone is making an effort to overcome PPD—a form of offset controllability—would result in changes in anger, sympathy, and social support outcome expectations (SSOEs), and indirectly influence willingness to provide support. Participants were randomly assigned to one of eight conditions focused on the stability and controllability (onset and offset) of PPD, resulting in a 2 × 2 × 2 design. Study 1 used written vignettes and compared each attribution construct to its polar opposite (e.g., temporary vs. permanent). Many of the Study 1 hypotheses were supported, but the interactions offered minimal explanatory value. Study 2 used video messages that either did or did not explicitly mention each attribution construct. Study 2 results indicated that a message focused on the temporary nature of PPD increased SSOEs and was indirectly associated with willingness to provide support. A message focused on effort increased sympathy and by extension willingness to provide support. The onset controllability message had no significant effects in Study 2. The interaction of the different attribution constructs were not significant. Results indicate that offset controllability, operationalized as effort, the extent to which a situation is temporary, and the influence of SSOEs, might be underutilized in both theoretical and applied research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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