Affiliation:
1. The College of Natural and Behavioral Sciences, Christopher Newport University, Newport News, VA 23606, USA
Abstract
The fading affect bias (FAB) occurs in autobiographical memory when unpleasant emotions fade faster than pleasant emotions and the phenomenon appears to be a form of emotion regulation. As emotion regulation is positively related to problem solving, the current study examined FAB in the context of problem solving. In-person and online studies asked participants to provide basic demographics, describe their problem-solving abilities, and rate various healthy and unhealthy variables, including emotional intelligence and positive problem-solving attitudes. Participants also completed an autobiographical event memory form for which they recalled and described two pleasant and two unpleasant problem-solving and non-problem-solving events and rated the initial and current affect and rehearsals for those events. We found a robust FAB effect that was larger for problem-solving events than for non-problem-solving events in Study 1 but not in Study 2. We also found that FAB was positively related to healthy variables, such as grit, and negatively related to unhealthy variables, such as depression. Moreover, many of these negative relations were inverted at high levels of positive problem-solving attitudes, and these complex interactions were partially mediated by talking rehearsals and thinking rehearsals.
Reference63 articles.
1. Stressors and problem-solving: The individual as psychological activist;Thoits;J. Health Soc. Behav.,1994
2. Positive emotions broaden the scope of attention and thought-action repertoires;Fredrickson;Cogn. Emot.,2005
3. Lehman, B.A., D’Mello, S.K., and Person, N. (2024, July 11). All Alone with Your Emotions: An Analysis of Student Emotions during Effortful Problem Solving Activities. ResearchGate. Available online: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/228630627_All_Alone_with_your_Emotions_an_analysis_of_student_emotions_during_effortful_problem_solving_activities.
4. Autobiographical memory: Unpleasantness fades faster than pleasantness over time;Walker;Appl. Cogn. Psychol.,1997
5. Life is pleasant—And memory helps to keep it that way!;Walker;Rev. Gen. Psychol.,2003