Beyond Bipolar Conceptualizations and Measures: The Case of Attitudes and Evaluative Space

1997 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 3-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
John T. Cacioppo ◽  
Wendi L. Gardner ◽  
Gary G. Berntson

All organisms must be capable of differentiating hostile from hospitable stimuli to survive. Typically, this evaluative discrimination is conceptualized as being bipolar (hostile-hospitable). This conceptualization is certainly evident in the area of attitudes, where the ubiquitous bipolar attitude measure, by gauging the net affective predisposition toward a stimulus, treats positive and negative evaluative processes as equivalent, reciprocally activated, and interchangeable. Contrary to conceptualizations of this evaluative process as bipolar, recent evidence suggests that distinguishable motivational systems underlie assessments of the positive and negative significance of a stimulus. Thus, a stimulus may vary in terms of the strength of positive evaluative activation and the strength of negative evaluative activation it evokes. Low activation of positive and negative evaluative processes by a stimulus reflects attitude neutrality or indifference, whereas high activation of positive and negative evaluative processes reflects attitude ambivalence. As such, attitudes can be represented more completely within a bivariate space than along a bipolar continuum. Evidence is reviewed showing that the positive and negative evaluative processes underlying many attitudes are distinguishable (stochastically and functionally independent), are characterized by distinct activation functions (positivity offset and negativity bias principles), are related differentially to attitude ambivalence (corollary of ambivalence asymmetries), have distinguishable antecedents (heteroscedacity principle), and tend to gravitate from a bivariate toward a bipolar structure when the underlying beliefs are the target of deliberation or a guide for behavior (principle of motivational certainty). The implications for societal phenomena such as political elections and democratic structures are discussed.

2009 ◽  
Vol 201 (2) ◽  
pp. 141-153 ◽  
Author(s):  
Baolin Liu ◽  
Zhixing Jin ◽  
Zhongning Wang ◽  
Yu Hu

2020 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 621-633 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonia Micucci ◽  
Vera Ferrari ◽  
Andrea De Cesarei ◽  
Maurizio Codispoti

Emotional stimuli engage corticolimbic circuits and capture attention even when they are task-irrelevant distractors. Whether top–down or contextual factors can modulate the filtering of emotional distractors is a matter of debate. Recent studies have indicated that behavioral interference by emotional distractors habituates rapidly when the same stimuli are repeated across trials. However, little is known as to whether we can attenuate the impact of novel (never repeated) emotional distractors when they occur frequently. In two experiments, we investigated the effects of distractor frequency on the processing of task-irrelevant novel pictures, as reflected in both behavioral interference and neural activity, while participants were engaged in an orientation discrimination task. Experiment 1 showed that, compared with a rare distractor condition (20%), frequent distractors (80%) reduced the interference of emotional stimuli. Moreover, Experiment 2 provided evidence that emotional interference was reduced by distractor frequency even when rare, and unexpected, emotional distractors appeared among frequent neutral distractors. On the other hand, in both experiments, the late positive potential amplitude was enhanced for emotional, compared with neutral, pictures, and this emotional modulation was not reduced when distractors were frequently presented. Altogether, these findings suggest that the high occurrence of task-irrelevant stimuli does not proactively prevent the processing of emotional distractors. Even when attention allocation to novel emotional stimuli is reduced, evaluative processes and the engagement of motivational systems are needed to support the monitoring of the environment for significant events.


2011 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 100-111 ◽  
Author(s):  
Catherine J. Norris ◽  
Jeff T. Larsen ◽  
L. Elizabeth Crawford ◽  
John T. Cacioppo

2017 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 226-238 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregory P. Strauss ◽  
Katherine H. Visser ◽  
Bern G. Lee ◽  
James M. Gold

Prior studies have concluded that schizophrenia patients are not anhedonic because they do not report reduced experience of positive emotion to pleasant stimuli. The current study challenged this view by applying quantitative methods validated in the evaluative space model of emotional experience to test the hypothesis that schizophrenia patients evidence a reduction in the normative “positivity offset” (i.e., the tendency to experience higher levels of positive than negative emotional output when stimulus input is absent or weak). Participants included 76 schizophrenia patients and 60 healthy controls who completed an emotional experience task that required reporting the level of positive emotion, negative emotion, and arousal to photographs. Results indicated that although schizophrenia patients evidenced intact capacity to experience positive emotion at high levels of stimulus input, they displayed a diminished positivity offset. Reductions in the positivity offset may underlie volitional disturbance, limiting approach behaviors toward novel stimuli in neutral environments.


2016 ◽  
Vol 52 ◽  
pp. 166-170 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jackie K. Gollan ◽  
Denada Hoxha ◽  
Kallio Hunnicutt-Ferguson ◽  
Catherine J. Norris ◽  
Laina Rosebrock ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 37-48 ◽  
Author(s):  
Justin Robert Keene ◽  
Heather Shoenberger ◽  
Collin K. Berke ◽  
Paul D. Bolls

Recent research has revealed the complex origins of political identification and the possible effects of this identification on social and political behavior. This article reports the results of a structural equation analysis of national survey data that attempts to replicate the finding that an individual’s negativity bias predicts conservative ideology. The analysis employs the Motivational Activation Measure (MAM) as an index of an individual’s positivity offset and negativity bias. In addition, information-seeking behavior is assessed in relation to traditional and interactive media sources of political information. Results show that although MAM does not consistently predict political identification, it can be used to predict extremeness of political views. Specifically, high negativity bias was associated with extreme conservatism, whereas low negativity bias was associated with extreme liberalism. In addition, political identification was found to moderate the relationship between motivational traits and information-seeking behavior.


2013 ◽  
Vol 55 (5) ◽  
pp. 469-473 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca L. Ashare ◽  
Catherine J. Norris ◽  
E. Paul Wileyto ◽  
John T. Cacioppo ◽  
Andrew A. Strasser

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