Affective Facilitation and Inhibition of Cultural Influences on Reasoning
Research in South Korea and the United States examined how affective states facilitate or inhibit culturally dominant styles of reasoning. According to the affect-as-information hypothesis, affective cues of mood influence judgements by serving as embodied information about the value of accessible i...
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2012
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sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-55952015-04-08T06:12:06Z Affective Facilitation and Inhibition of Cultural Influences on Reasoning KOO, Minkyung Clore, Gerald L. KIM, Jongmin Choi, Incheol Research in South Korea and the United States examined how affective states facilitate or inhibit culturally dominant styles of reasoning. According to the affect-as-information hypothesis, affective cues of mood influence judgements by serving as embodied information about the value of accessible inclinations and cognitions. Extending this line of research to culture, we hypothesised that positive affect should promote (and negative affect should inhibit) culturally normative reasoning. The results of two studies of causal reasoning supported this hypothesis. Positive and negative affect functioned like “go” and “stop” signals, respectively, for culturally typical reasoning styles. Thus, in happy (compared to sad) moods, Koreans engaged in more holistic reasoning, whereas Americans engaged in more analytic reasoning. 2012-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/4596 info:doi/10.1080/02699931.2011.613920 https://doi.org/10.1080/02699931.2011.613920 Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Affect Mood Cognition Culture Analytic-holistic reasoning Affect-as-information Asian Studies Business Psychology |
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Affect Mood Cognition Culture Analytic-holistic reasoning Affect-as-information Asian Studies Business Psychology KOO, Minkyung Clore, Gerald L. KIM, Jongmin Choi, Incheol Affective Facilitation and Inhibition of Cultural Influences on Reasoning |
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Research in South Korea and the United States examined how affective states facilitate or inhibit culturally dominant styles of reasoning. According to the affect-as-information hypothesis, affective cues of mood influence judgements by serving as embodied information about the value of accessible inclinations and cognitions. Extending this line of research to culture, we hypothesised that positive affect should promote (and negative affect should inhibit) culturally normative reasoning. The results of two studies of causal reasoning supported this hypothesis. Positive and negative affect functioned like “go” and “stop” signals, respectively, for culturally typical reasoning styles. Thus, in happy (compared to sad) moods, Koreans engaged in more holistic reasoning, whereas Americans engaged in more analytic reasoning. |
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text |
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KOO, Minkyung Clore, Gerald L. KIM, Jongmin Choi, Incheol |
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KOO, Minkyung Clore, Gerald L. KIM, Jongmin Choi, Incheol |
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KOO, Minkyung |
title |
Affective Facilitation and Inhibition of Cultural Influences on Reasoning |
title_short |
Affective Facilitation and Inhibition of Cultural Influences on Reasoning |
title_full |
Affective Facilitation and Inhibition of Cultural Influences on Reasoning |
title_fullStr |
Affective Facilitation and Inhibition of Cultural Influences on Reasoning |
title_full_unstemmed |
Affective Facilitation and Inhibition of Cultural Influences on Reasoning |
title_sort |
affective facilitation and inhibition of cultural influences on reasoning |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2012 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/4596 https://doi.org/10.1080/02699931.2011.613920 |
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