Do you see what I see?
Affect and visual information processing
Individuals
in sad moods process information in a less global and more local manner than do
those in happier moods. This experiment investigates whether processing speed
is associated with these mood effects, whether task ambiguity moderates these
mood effects, and whether making feelings appear irrelevant to the task can
eliminate these mood effects. Participants in happy, sad, and neutral moods
were lead to experience their feelings as being either relevant or irrelevant
to a global/local processing task. As predicted, sad moods decreased global
processing relative to happier moods when feelings seemed relevant to the task
and when the criteria for responding were ambiguous, but not when feelings
seemed irrelevant or when the criteria were unambiguous. Consistent with the
idea that mood guides processing, increases in affect
intensity were associated with faster reaction times. Overall, the results
suggest that mood and processing effects share some core similarities with mood
and judgment effects