4.3 Article

The many faces of emotional contagion: An affective process theory of affective linkage

Journal

ORGANIZATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY REVIEW
Volume 4, Issue 4, Pages 326-362

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/2041386614542889

Keywords

Affect; affective linkage; emotion; emotional contagion; interpersonal emotion transfer

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [BCS-0617634]

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Emotional contagion-emotions being linked across people-has captured psychologists' attention yet little is known about its mechanisms. Early influential treatments focused on primitive mimicry. Later accounts emphasized (a) social comparison, whereby people compare their feelings with compatriots', (b) emotional interpretation, where others' expressive displays serve as information, and (c) empathy, or imagining another person's feelings. This paper introduces affective process theory (APT), which unifies these mechanisms and identifies others. Using a rule-governed theoretical process, APT reveals 10 distinct mechanisms that connect people's affective states, which fall into three types. Convergent linkage occurs when individuals share the same vantage point and interpretations of emotionally evocative stimuli. Divergent linkage occurs with a shared vantage point but different interpretations. Complementary linkage occurs when the other person is itself the stimulus. APT integrates past findings on moderating factors such as social closeness and cooperation. Implications for practice and future research are discussed.

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