Specificity in the Study of Mixed Emotions: A Theoretical Framework.

Vincent Y S Oh, Eddie M W Tong
Author Information
  1. Vincent Y S Oh: National University of Singapore, Singapore. ORCID
  2. Eddie M W Tong: National University of Singapore, Singapore.

Abstract

Research on mixed emotions is yet to consider emotion-specificity, the idea that same-valenced emotions have distinctive characteristics and functions. We review two decades of research on mixed emotions, focusing on evidence for the occurrence of mixed emotions and the effects of mixed emotions on downstream outcomes. We then propose a novel theoretical framework of mixed-emotion-specificity with three foundational tenets: (a) Mixed emotions are distinguishable from single-valenced emotions and other mixed emotions based on their emotion-appraisal relationships; (b) Mixed emotions can further be characterized by four patterns that describe relationships between simultaneous appraisals or appraisals that are unique to mixed emotions; and (c) Carryover effects occur only on outcomes that are associated with the appraisal characteristics of mixed emotion. We outline how mixed-emotion-specific effects can be predicted based on the appraisal tendency framework. Temporal dynamics, the application of mixed-emotion-specificity to individual difference research, methodological issues, and future directions are also discussed.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Affect
Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions
Emotions
Humans
Individuality

Word Cloud

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