Jb. Halberstadt et Pm. Niedenthal, EMOTIONAL STATE AND THE USE OF STIMULUS DIMENSIONS IN JUDGMENT, Journal of personality and social psychology, 72(5), 1997, pp. 1017-1033
Previous studies have demonstrated that, when they are emotional, indi
viduals are more likely to attend to emotional stimuli. However, such
work has not established that individuals attend to the emotional dime
nsions of complex stimuli or that such changes in focus of attention a
ffect judgments. in the present experiments a multidimensional scaling
analysis nas used to assess the weights that happy, sad, and neutral-
emotion participants gave to emotional and nonemotional dimensions of
face stimuli in judgments of similarity. Compared to neutral-emotion p
articipants, those in emotional states gave more weight to the emotion
al dimension of the faces, less weight to other face dimensions, and r
ated pairs of faces that expressed the same emotion as more similar. E
motion-congruent dimension use was also observed in one experiment. Re
sults are discussed with respect to emotional response categories (P.
M. Niedenthal & J. B. Halberstadt, 1995), the tendency for stimuli to
cohere as categories on the basis of the emotional response they elici
t in the perceiver.