Journal article

Emotional inertia is associated with lower well-being when controlling for differences in emotional context

P Koval, S Sütterlin, P Kuppens

Frontiers in Psychology | FRONTIERS MEDIA SA | Published : 2016

Open access

Abstract

Previous studies have linked higher emotional inertia (i.e., a stronger autoregressive slope of emotions) with lower well-being. We aimed to replicate these findings, while extending upon previous research by addressing a number of unresolved issues and controlling for potential confounds. Specifically, we report results from two studies (Ns = 100 and 202) examining how emotional inertia, assessed in response to a standardized sequence of emotional stimuli in the lab, correlates with several measures of well-being. The current studies build on previous research by examining how inertia of both positive emotions (PE) and negative emotions (NE) relates to positive (e.g., life satisfaction) and..

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University of Melbourne Researchers