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      • Across studies, we predicted and found that anger, surprise, and awe can each lead to relatively higher or lower levels of information processing depending on whether it is the appraisal of pleasantness/unpleasantness or the appraisal of confidence/doubt within each of these emotions that is salient.
      www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S002210312030425X
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  2. Mar 1, 2021 · We argue that whether anger and other emotions leads to higher or lower levels of information processing depends on the appraisal of the emotion that is highlighted. With respect to anger, when people focus on the unpleasantness that accompanies this emotion, they are postulated to process information to a greater degree than when they focus on ...

    • Maria Stavraki, Grigorios Lamprinakos, Pablo Briñol, Richard E. Petty, Kalipso Karantinou, Darío Día...
    • 2021
  3. Jun 20, 2020 · For example, high-certainty emotions, such as anger and happiness, increase heuristic processing by increasing the use of stereotypes and expertise persuasion; while low-certainty emotions, such as fear, may decrease the use of heuristics.

    • Meaghan McKasy
    • meaghan.mckasy@uvu.edu
    • 2020
  4. Traditionally, the study of perception has stressed low level, bottom-up visual processes. But research suggests that higher level processes may play a role as well. A recent study demonstrated top-down effects of emotional information on face perception . The study involved a binocular rivalry task, in which a different image is presented to ...

  5. Mar 1, 2021 · We argue that whether anger and other emotions leads to higher or lower levels of information processing depends on the appraisal of the emotion that is highlighted.

    • Maria Stavraki, Grigorios Lamprinakos, Pablo Briñol, Richard E. Petty, Kalipso Karantinou, Darío Día...
    • 2021
  6. Despite being a negative emotion, anger carries positive information about one’s own position. When angry, one believes oneself to be correct, which should increase confidence in one’s own cognitions.

  7. Emotions can impact the depth of information processing and anger is a powerful high-certainty emotion. Yet, the magnitude of the effects of anger on the depth of information processing has not been summarized. …

  8. Oct 22, 2020 · Thus, emotions influence interpersonal decision-making, for example, negative emotion like anger influences the depth and content of thought processing, as it leads to the attribution of negative events caused by others.