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  1. Solving problems with an Aha! increases risk preference.Yuhua Yu, Carola Salvi, Maxi Becker & Mark Beeman - 2024 - Thinking and Reasoning 30 (3):509-530.
    Solving problems with insight culminates in an “Aha! moment”: a feeling of confidence and pleasure. In daily life, insights are often followed by important decisions, such as deciding what to do with a new idea. Here, we investigated whether having an Aha! moment affects subsequent decision-making. Because Aha! moments tend to elicit positive affect, which is generally associated with an increased risk-taking tendency, we hypothesized that people would favor a monetary payout with more upside despite greater uncertainty after solving a (...)
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  • Pleasures of the Mind: What Makes Jokes and Insight Problems Enjoyable.Carla Canestrari, Erika Branchini, Ivana Bianchi, Ugo Savardi & Roberto Burro - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  • A Little Mood Music: On the Relationship between Musical and Psychological Moods.Tatyana Kostochka - forthcoming - British Journal of Aesthetics.
    We regularly talk about music as if it has moods or, at least, expresses moods. However, the relationship between psychological and musical moods remains mysterious. Music doesn’t have feelings, so how could it have moods? To make up for that, many philosophers have provided theories of expression that don’t rely on music actually possessing anything mood-like. In this paper, I argue that if we take seriously an account of psychological moods that includes patterns of attention as part of the mood (...)
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  • Human preferences are biased towards associative information.Sabrina Trapp, Amitai Shenhav, Sebastian Bitzer & Moshe Bar - 2015 - Cognition and Emotion 29 (6):1054-1068.
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  • Lacan and the language of mania. From language gone mad to the madness of llanguage.Bart Rabaey & Stijn Vanheule - 2023 - Philosophical Psychology 36 (7):1346-1368.
    1. In this contribution we will discuss phenomena of language in mania within a Lacanian framework. In psychiatric descriptions manic language phenomena are mainly captured under the term flight of...
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  • Global Processing Makes People Happier Than Local Processing.Li-Jun Ji, Suhui Yap, Michael W. Best & Kayla McGeorge - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10:438506.
    Past research demonstrates that mood can influence level of perceptual processing (global vs. local). The present research shows that level of perceptual processing can influence mood as well. In four studies, we manipulated people’s level of perceptual processing using a Navon letter task (Study 1), landscape scenery (Study 2), and Google Maps Street View images (Studies 3 and 4). Results from these studies and a meta-analysis support the conclusion that global processing results in higher happiness than local processing. In conjunction (...)
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