Emotional Inertia is Associated with Lower Well-Being when Controlling for Differences in Emotional Context
Work
Year: 2016
Type: article
Abstract: Previous studies have linked higher emotional inertia (i.e., a stronger autoregressive slope of emotions) with lower well-being. We aimed to replicate these findings, while extending upon previous res... more
Source: Frontiers in Psychology
Cites: 71
Cited by: 97
Related to: 10
FWCI: 4.297
Citation percentile (by year/subfield): 92.59
Subfield: Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Field: Psychology
Domain: Social Sciences
Open Access status: gold
APC paid (est): $2,950