affective states
Also known as: affective state, conscious affective states
Facts (8)
Sources
Understanding the Psychology of Impulse Buying in E-Commerce jmsr-online.com Aug 9, 2025 2 facts
referenceMeryl P. Gardner and Dennis W. Rook authored 'Effects of impulse purchases on consumers’ affective states,' published in Advances in Consumer Research in 1988, volume 15, issue 1, pages 127–30.
referenceGardner and Rook (1988) examined the effects of impulse purchases on the affective states of consumers in the journal Advances in Consumer Research.
Self-Consciousness - Open Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science oecs.mit.edu Jul 24, 2024 2 facts
claimJohn Locke proposed that the human sense of self is not purely psychological, but extends to include the embodied capacity to feel sensations and other affective and homeostatic states.
referenceResearch by Carruthers (2011) examines how human and non-human animals monitor and regulate their own cognitive and affective states.
Consciousness (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy/Fall 2025 ... plato.stanford.edu Jun 18, 2004 1 fact
referenceConscious affective states, such as pleasures and pains, play a major role in many accounts of value that underlie moral theory, as noted by Peter Singer in 1975.
The Evolution of Transcendence | Evolutionary Psychological Science link.springer.com Jun 1, 2016 1 fact
claimExploiters, or manipulators, may have evolved the ability to elicit seemingly positive affective states in others as a disarming maneuver, which can be reproductively costly to the victim even if the experience is not horrifying.
Development of Behavioral Economics - NCBI - NIH ncbi.nlm.nih.gov 1 fact
referenceNorbert Schwarz and Gerald L. Clore published 'Mood, misattribution, and judgments of well-being: Informative and directive functions of affective states' in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology in 1983, exploring how affective states influence judgments.
Self-awareness, self-regulation, and self-transcendence (S-ART) frontiersin.org 1 fact
referenceMeta-awareness (meta-cognition) allows an individual to disengage from the contents of awareness to experience another person's sensory or affective state, according to research by Decety and Chaminade (2003) and Singer and Lamm (2009).