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Author(s)

Miguel Brendl

E. Higgins

Three studies psychophysically measured people's discrimination among different sizes of monetary net gains or net losses. Participants imagined either gains or nonlosses (i.e., net gains) or losses or nongains (i.e., net losses). Participants discriminated more when the identical event was framed as the presence (gains and losses) versus the absence (nonlosses and nongains) of an outcome, presumably because the latter is harder to represent. Discrimination was enhanced when the motivational features of the imagined event were either both the same as or both different from a person's self-discrepancy. Discrimination was reduced when only one of the motivational features was different. A model of excitations, inhibitions, and disinhibitions between mental representation is suggested to account for these findings.
Date Published: 1995
Citations: Brendl, Miguel, E. Higgins. 1995. Sensitivity to varying Gains and Losses: The Role of Self-Discrepancies and Event Framing. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. (6)1028-1051.