Temporal patterns of pleasant and unpleasant affect following uncertain decision-making

Yan Li, Neal M. Ashkanasy

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

    Abstract

    In a computer-based experimental study, we explored intensity of pleasant and unpleasant emotional experiences (affect), following immediate outcomes of risky choices over time under three levels of uncertainty (80%, 50%, 20%). We found that the intensity of pleasant affect initially increased linearly before suddenly reducing after the seventh task, and then resumed the linear upward trend. In contrast, the intensity of unpleasant affect cyclically changed after every five decision tasks, displaying a wave-like pattern. Interestingly, the 50% probability (maximum information entropy) group demonstrated patterns quite different to the other two groups (20%, 80%). For pleasant affect, this group reduced in positive affect significantly more than the other two groups after the seventh decision task. For unpleasant affect, the 50% group displayed an increasing negative affect trend, while the other two groups displayed a reducing negative affect trend. In sum, our findings reveal different temporal patterns of pleasant emotions from correct decisions and unpleasant emotions resulting from wrong decisions. We conclude that, consistent with the self-organization theory, these differences reflect nonlinear changes in the emotional system to cope with the challenge of uncertainty (or entropy).

    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationResearch on Emotion in Organizations
    PublisherEmerald Group Publishing Ltd.
    Pages3-25
    Number of pages23
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2018

    Publication series

    NameResearch on Emotion in Organizations
    Volume14
    ISSN (Print)1746-9791

    Keywords

    • Decision-making
    • Emotion
    • Entropy
    • Self-organization theory
    • Temporal patterns
    • Uncertainty

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