Department of Psychology, Chinese University of Hong Kong.
Department of Psychology, Stanford University.
Emotion. 2016 Feb;16(1):52-62. doi: 10.1037/emo0000094. Epub 2015 Jul 27.
Previous findings indirectly suggest that the more people perceive their time in life as limited, the more they value calm. No study, however, has directly tested this hypothesis. To this end, using a combination of survey, experience sampling, and experimental methods, we examined the relationship between future time perspective and the affective states that people ideally want to feel (i.e., their "ideal affect"). In Study 1, the more people reported a limited time perspective, the more they wanted to feel calm and experience other low-arousal positive states. In Study 2, participants were randomly assigned to a limited time or an expanded time condition. Participants in the limited time condition reported valuing calm and other low arousal positive states more than those in the expanded time condition. We discuss the implications of these findings for broadening our understanding of the factors that shape how people ideally want to feel, and their consequences for decision making.
先前的研究结果间接表明,人们对生命时间的感知越有限,他们就越重视平静。然而,没有研究直接检验这一假设。为此,我们综合运用问卷调查、经验取样和实验方法,检验了未来时间视角与人们理想感受的情绪状态(即“理想情绪”)之间的关系。在研究 1 中,人们报告的时间视角越有限,他们就越想要感到平静,并体验到其他低唤醒的积极状态。在研究 2 中,参与者被随机分配到有限时间或扩展时间条件下。处于有限时间条件下的参与者比处于扩展时间条件下的参与者更重视平静和其他低唤醒的积极状态。我们讨论了这些发现对拓宽我们对塑造人们理想感受的因素的理解以及对决策的影响。