Attending to the Big Picture: Mood and Global Versus Local Processing of Visual Information
Pennsylvania State University · University of Virginia
Abstract
Two experiments employed image-based tasks to test the hypothesis that happier moods promote a greater focus on the forest and sadder moods a greater focus on the trees. The hypothesis was based on the idea that in task situations, affective cues may be experienced as task-relevant information, which then influences global versus local attention. Using a serial-reproduction paradigm, Experiment 1 showed that individuals in sad moods were less likely than those in happier moods to use an accessible global concept to guide attempts to reproduce a drawing from memory. Experiment 2 investigated the same hypothesis by assessing the use of global and local attributes to classify geometricfigures. As predicted,…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 10.80
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 44
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Psychology
- Task (project management)
- Mood
- Focus (optics)
- Cognitive psychology
- Test (biology)
- Contrast (vision)
- Information processing