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|a Skowronski, J.J.
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|a Sedikides, C.
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|a Xie, W.
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|a Zhou, X.
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|a Changing the working self alters the emotions prompted by recall of personal pasts
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|c 2015-02.
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|z Get fulltext
|u https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/374619/1/__filestore.soton.ac.uk_Users_gg_mydocuments_constantine%2520publications%2520pdf%2527s_2015_Skowronski%252C%2520Sedikides%252C%2520Xie%252C%2520%2526%2520Zhou%252C%25202015%252C%2520Memor.pdf
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|a Results from three studies indicated that emotional responses to memories can be changed by altering the working self. In particular, these results showed that emotional reactions to memories: (1) were especially positive when memories were perceived to be central to the working self (Experiment 1); (2) were muted when the working self was changed by adopting a third-person perspective during recall (Experiment 1); (3) of an event in the life of each participant's mother weakened when an individual was induced to experience a self that felt less close to their mother (Experiment 2) and (4) of a childhood event provoked especially positive emotional reactions after exposure to a mortality salience manipulation that increased perceived self-worth (Experiment 3). The extent to which mother was included in the self (Experiment 2) and self-worth (Experiment 3) plausibly mediated the effects of the manipulations on participants' emotional reactions to recalled events
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|a Article
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