Skip to main content
logo

Global Conference 2019

July 12–16, 2019

Peking University, Beijing, China

Proposal authors can use this tool to see where they have been placed in the agenda. Please scroll down to search by Author Name (Note: if the submitting author did not add all authors to the ProposalSpace form, only First & Corresponding Author will be searchable), or by Date/Time.

 

Facing the Risks: How Emotional Messages Facilitate Feeling of Control

Sunday, July 14, 2019 at 8:30 AM–Saturday, July 13, 2019 at 10:00 AM CST
3 Room 3
Keywords: Please select at least two and no more than four. Hold the CTRL key to select multiple
Emotion and Affect
Experimental Research
Abstract

Grounded in the compensatory control theory and emotion regulation hypothesis, the current study proposes the underlying mechanism to explain how people in different levels of control are motivated to regulate their emotions. To further test this mechanism, this study utilizes various emotional appeals to examine different routes that individuals take to restore or maintain their level of control in the context of anti-terrorism communication. People with higher perceived control report greater feeling of control and more favorable ad attitude when exposed to a positive and high-dominance message as well as a negative and low-dominance message. In contrast, those with lower perceived control report similar results when exposed to four different emotional messages.

First & Corresponding Author

Taylor Jing Wen, University of South Carolina
Authors in the order to be printed.

Taylor Jing Wen, Naa Amponsah Dodoo, Jon D. Morris

Additional Authors

Naa Amponsah Dodoo, Emerson College
Jon Morris, University of Florida
Loading…