The relative importance of affect variability and mean levels of affect in predicting complex task performance
Maddison N. North, Jonathan T. Huck, Eric Anthony Day, Ashley G. Jorgensen, Kelsey A. Richels

TL;DR
This study explores how emotional fluctuations and average emotions affect performance on complex tasks.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel comparison of affect variability and mean emotion levels in predicting task performance.
Findings
Mean levels of emotion were the strongest predictors of off-task attention and performance.
Flux in negative emotions also significantly contributed to predicting outcomes.
Researchers should consider mean levels when studying affect variability's impact.
Abstract
Although research indicates affect variability—the extent to which an individual’s emotions fluctuate—is associated with behavioral outcomes related to adjustment and adaptability, it is unclear to what extent findings make important contributions to the literature when past research has failed to account for the role of mean levels of emotion. Accordingly, we conducted a repeated-measures laboratory study of college students (N = 253) learning to perform a complex computer task to examine the relative importance of affect variability indices (i.e., spin, pulse, and flux) compared to mean levels in explaining variance in off-task attention and task performance before and after changes in task demands (i.e., skill acquisition and adaptation). In doing so, we also disentangled valence and arousal (i.e., activating versus deactivating) aspects of emotion. Relative importance analyses…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMind wandering and attention · Mental Health Research Topics · Neural and Behavioral Psychology Studies
