Looking Forward, Looking Back: Anticipation is More Evocative than Retrospection

Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, Vol. 136, pp. 289-300, 2007

12 Pages Posted: 18 Feb 2010

See all articles by Laurence Ashworth

Laurence Ashworth

Queen's University - Smith School of Business

Leaf Van Boven

University of Colorado Boulder

Date Written: 2007

Abstract

The results of 5 experiments indicate that people report more intense emotions during anticipation of, than during retrospection about, emotional events that were positive (Thanksgiving Day), negative (annoying noises, menstruation), routine (menstruation), and hypothetical (all-expenses-paid ski vacation). People’s tendency to report more intense emotion during anticipation than during retrospection was associated with a slight, but only occasionally significant, tendency for people to expect future emotions to be more intense than they remembered past emotions having been. The greater evocativeness of anticipation than retrospection was also associated with and statistically mediated by participants’ tendency to report mentally simulating future emotional events more extensively than they report mentally stimulating past emotional events. The conclusion that anticipation is more evocative than retrospection has implications for research methodology, clinical practice, decision making, and well-being.

Keywords: affective forecasting, anticipation, emotion, memory, simulation

Suggested Citation

Ashworth, Laurence and Van Boven, Leaf, Looking Forward, Looking Back: Anticipation is More Evocative than Retrospection (2007). Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, Vol. 136, pp. 289-300, 2007 , Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1532593

Laurence Ashworth

Queen's University - Smith School of Business ( email )

Smith School of Business - Queen's University
143 Union Street
Kingston, Ontario K7L 3N6
Canada

Leaf Van Boven (Contact Author)

University of Colorado Boulder ( email )

University of Colorado Boulder
Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, 345 UCB
Boulder, CO 80309
United States
303.735.5238 (Phone)
303.492.2967 (Fax)

HOME PAGE: http://psych.colorado.edu/~vanboven/

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