Search Results - "Larsen, Jeff"

Refine Results
  1. 1

    A Meta-Analysis of the Facial Feedback Literature: Effects of Facial Feedback on Emotional Experience Are Small and Variable by Coles, Nicholas A., Larsen, Jeff T., Lench, Heather C.

    Published in Psychological bulletin (01-06-2019)
    “…The facial feedback hypothesis suggests that an individual's experience of emotion is influenced by feedback from their facial movements. To evaluate the…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  2. 2

    Further Evidence for Mixed Emotions by LARSEN, Jeff T, MCGRAW, A. Peter

    “…Emotion theorists have long debated whether valence, which ranges from pleasant to unpleasant states, is an irreducible aspect of the experience of emotion or…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  3. 3

    Comparing Gains and Losses by McGraw, A. Peter, Larsen, Jeff T., Kahneman, Daniel, Schkade, David

    Published in Psychological science (01-10-2010)
    “…Loss aversion in choice is commonly assumed to arise from the anticipation that losses have a greater effect on feelings than gains, but evidence for this…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  4. 4

    Fact or Artifact? Demand Characteristics and Participants' Beliefs Can Moderate, but Do Not Fully Account for, the Effects of Facial Feedback on Emotional Experience by Coles, Nicholas A., Gaertner, Lowell, Frohlich, Brooke, Larsen, Jeff T., Basnight-Brown, Dana M.

    “…The facial feedback hypothesis suggests that an individual's facial expressions can influence their emotional experience (e.g., that smiling can make one feel…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  5. 5

    On the Relationship Between Positive and Negative Affect: Their Correlation and Their Co-Occurrence by Larsen, Jeff T., Hershfield, Hal. E., Stastny, Bradley J., Hester, Neil

    Published in Emotion (Washington, D.C.) (01-03-2017)
    “…Understanding the nature of emotional experience requires understanding the relationship between positive and negative affect. Two particularly important…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  6. 6
  7. 7

    Feeling Good and Bad About Nothing at All: Evidence That the Status Quo Can Elicit Mixed Feelings by Norris, Catherine J, Larsen, Jeff T

    Published in Emotion (Washington, D.C.) (01-09-2020)
    “…Sometimes we come out ahead and sometimes we fall behind. Sometimes the status quo is maintained and we end up where we began. The status quo can be…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  8. 8

    The good, the bad and the neutral: Electrophysiological responses to feedback stimuli by Holroyd, Clay B., Hajcak, Greg, Larsen, Jeff T.

    Published in Brain research (11-08-2006)
    “…The feedback error-related negativity (fERN) is a component of the event-related brain potential elicited in gambling and trial-and-error learning tasks by…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article Conference Proceeding
  9. 9

    Feeling More Together: Group Attention Intensifies Emotion by Shteynberg, Garriy, Hirsh, Jacob B, Apfelbaum, Evan P, Larsen, Jeff T, Galinsky, Adam D, Roese, Neal J

    Published in Emotion (Washington, D.C.) (01-12-2014)
    “…The idea that group contexts can intensify emotions is centuries old. Yet, evidence that speaks to how, or if, emotions become more intense in groups remains…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  10. 10

    What might have been? The role of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex and lateral orbitofrontal cortex in counterfactual emotions and choice by Levens, Sara M., Larsen, Jeff T., Bruss, Joel, Tranel, Daniel, Bechara, Antoine, Mellers, Barbara A.

    Published in Neuropsychologia (01-02-2014)
    “…Counterfactual feelings of regret occur when people make comparisons between an actual outcome and a better outcome that would have occurred under a different…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  11. 11

    Effects of positive and negative affect on electromyographic activity over zygomaticus major and corrugator supercilii by Larsen, Jeff T., Norris, Catherine J., Cacioppo, John T.

    Published in Psychophysiology (01-09-2003)
    “…Pleasant stimuli typically elicit greater electromyographic (EMG) activity over zygomaticus major and less activity over corrugator supercilii than do…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  12. 12

    Face Coverings Differentially Alter Valence Judgments of Emotional Expressions by Harp, Nicholas R., Langbehn, Andrew T., Larsen, Jeff T., Niedenthal, Paula M., Neta, Maital

    “…Face masks that prevent disease transmission obscure facial expressions, impairing nonverbal communication. We assessed the impact of lower (masks) and upper…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  13. 13

    Perceiving an Object and Its Context in Different Cultures: A Cultural Look at New Look by Kitayama, Shinobu, Duffy, Sean, Kawamura, Tadashi, Larsen, Jeff T.

    Published in Psychological science (01-05-2003)
    “…In two studies, a newly devised test (framed-line test) was used to examine the hypothesis that individuals engaging in Asian cultures are more capable of…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  14. 14

    Meaningful Endings and Mixed Emotions: The Double-Edged Sword of Reminiscence on Good Times by Larsen, Jeff T., Hershfield, Hal E., Cazares, James L., Hogan, Candice L., Carstensen, Laura L.

    Published in Emotion (Washington, D.C.) (01-12-2021)
    “…Meaningful endings lead people to experience mixed emotions, but it is unclear why. We hypothesized that it is in part because meaningful endings lead people…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  15. 15

    Affective responses to ambivalence are context-dependent: A facial EMG study on the role of inconsistency and evaluative context in shaping affective responses to ambivalence by Nohlen, Hannah U., van Harreveld, Frenk, Rotteveel, Mark, Barends, Ard J., Larsen, Jeff T.

    Published in Journal of experimental social psychology (01-07-2016)
    “…It has long been debated whether attitudinal ambivalence elicits negative affect and evidence for such a link is inconclusive. Using facial EMG, we tested the…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  16. 16

    Neuroticism is associated with larger and more prolonged electrodermal responses to emotionally evocative pictures by Norris, Catherine J., Larsen, Jeff T., Cacioppo, John T.

    Published in Psychophysiology (01-09-2007)
    “…Elevated neuroticism is associated with increased psychological reactivity to stressors. Research on individual differences and physiological reactivity (e.g.,…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  17. 17

    Evidence for mixed feelings of happiness and sadness from brief moments in time by Larsen, Jeff T., Green, Jennifer D.

    Published in Cognition and emotion (01-12-2013)
    “…Theorists disagree about whether valence is a basic building block of affective experience or whether the positive and negative substrates underlying valence…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  18. 18

    It's A Bittersweet Symphony: Simultaneously Mixed Emotional Responses to Music With Conflicting Cues by LARSEN, Jeff T, STASTNY, Bradley J

    Published in Emotion (Washington, D.C.) (01-12-2011)
    “…Some evidence indicates that emotional reactions to music can be organized along a bipolar valence dimension ranging from pleasant states (e.g., happiness) to…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  19. 19

    Can People Feel Happy and Sad at the Same Time? by Larsen, Jeff T, McGraw, A. Peter, Cacioppo, John T

    “…The authors investigated whether people can feel happy and sad at the same time. J. A. Russell and J. M. Carroll's (1999) circumplex model holds that happiness…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  20. 20

    The evaluative space grid: A single-item measure of positivity and negativity by Larsen, Jeff T., Norris, Catherine J., McGraw, A. Peter, Hawkley, Louise C., Cacioppo, John T.

    Published in Cognition and emotion (01-04-2009)
    “…The authors introduce the evaluative space grid (ESG), a two-dimensional grid that provides a single-item measure of positivity and negativity. In Study 1, ESG…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article