Hb. Valdimarsdottir et Dh. Bovbjerg, POSITIVE AND NEGATIVE MOOD - ASSOCIATION WITH NATURAL-KILLER-CELL ACTIVITY, Psychology & health, 12(3), 1997, pp. 319-327
Negative mood (e.g., emotional distress) is known to affect immune fun
ction, but little research has addressed effects of positive mood. In
the present study, positive and negative mood (over a day) were examin
ed for their relations to natural killer cell activity (NKCA) in 48 he
althy women. Results indicated that women reporting some negative mood
(N = 26) had lower levels of NKCA than women who had no negative mood
, while those with higher levels of positive mood had higher NKCA. How
ever, as indicated by the significant interaction between positive and
negative mood, the relation between positive mood and NKCA depended u
pon the women's experience of negative mood. Higher levels of positive
mood were related to higher levels of NKCA only among the women who r
eported having some negative mood over the day. These results raise th
e possibility that positive mood may moderate, or buffer, the effects
of negative mood on immune function.