AI Article Synopsis

  • - This paper reviews how emotions (affect) impact health-related decisions, categorizing them into integral (related) and incidental (unrelated) influences, as well as current (in-the-moment) and anticipated (future expectations) affect.
  • - It summarizes important findings about how these different types of emotions affect health choices, particularly focusing on current integral, current incidental, and anticipated integral affect.
  • - The paper also identifies gaps and challenges in the existing research, highlighting opportunities for future studies to apply affective and decision science theories to enhance understanding and interventions in health decision-making.

Article Abstract

This paper provides an overview of affect and health decision-making research, with a focus on identifying gaps, opportunities, and challenges to guide future research. We begin by defining common categorical distinctions of affective processes that influence health decisions: integral (i.e., related to the decision) and incidental (i.e., normatively unrelated to the decision) influences, and current (experienced in the moment) and anticipated ("cognitive representations" of future affect) affect. We then summarize key discoveries within the most common categories of affective influences on health decision making: current integral affect, current incidental affect, and anticipated integral affect. Finally, we highlight research gaps, challenges, and opportunities for future directions for research aimed at translating affective and decision science theory to improve our understanding of, and ability to intervene upon, health decision making.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8078832PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/spc3.12502DOI Listing

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