“…There are now many studies showing that anger acts like happiness in its effects on cognitive processing, including elicitation of a global focus. The experience of anger, for example, is associated with reliance on stereotypes (Bodenhausen et al, ), heuristics (Ask & Granhag, 2007; Small & Lerner, ), greater attention to peripheral cues in a persuasion context (Bodenhausen et al, ; Tiedens & Linton, ), more abstract, global self‐descriptions (Isbell et al, ), and encourages reliance on chronically accessible scripts (Tiedens, ). Fear, by contrast, is associated with a local, systematic processing style and therefore a greater reliance on detailed information when making decisions, a focus on argument quality in a persuasion context, and a narrowed focus of attention (Baron, Logan, Lilly, Inman, & Brennan, 1994; Bohner & Weinerth, ; Easterbrook, ; Parker & Isbell, 2010; Tiedens & Linton, ).…”