2015
DOI: 10.1002/mar.20819
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Age‐Related Differences in Emotion Regulation within the Context of Sad and Happy TV Programs

Abstract: International audienceThe marketing literature on program context includes several studies on the influence of program-induced positive and negative emotions on the evaluation of embedded television advertisements. While the majority of these studies have been conducted with younger adults, new discoveries on the differentiated processes of emotion regulation among younger and older adults are reviving interest in this topic. The present study examined the impact of television program context on program-induce… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(21 citation statements)
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References 61 publications
(91 reference statements)
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“…These regulation strategies can be categorized according to when they impact the cued response. Individuals may use antecedent‐focused strategies to prevent the cued response from becoming fully activated, like shifting one's attention away from the movie to the ceiling tiles, or they may use response‐focused strategies to modify resulting behavior after the cued cognitive or emotional response has already been put in motion, like reminding oneself it is just a movie (Droulers, Lacoste‐Badie, & Malek, ; Gross, , ). However, even research on antecedent‐focused strategies assumes that individuals are aware of their imminent response (Webb, Miles, & Sheeran, ); consequently, these strategies cannot be applied to priming effects, which, by definition, occur without conscious awareness.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These regulation strategies can be categorized according to when they impact the cued response. Individuals may use antecedent‐focused strategies to prevent the cued response from becoming fully activated, like shifting one's attention away from the movie to the ceiling tiles, or they may use response‐focused strategies to modify resulting behavior after the cued cognitive or emotional response has already been put in motion, like reminding oneself it is just a movie (Droulers, Lacoste‐Badie, & Malek, ; Gross, , ). However, even research on antecedent‐focused strategies assumes that individuals are aware of their imminent response (Webb, Miles, & Sheeran, ); consequently, these strategies cannot be applied to priming effects, which, by definition, occur without conscious awareness.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The pre-test results indicated that the mood swings caused by happy and sad videos are significantly different, unlike the level of excitement [36], the value of which indicates no significant differences.…”
Section: Pt Sowden and L Dawsonmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…Gross’s initial emotion regulation model (1998) offers an explanation for the different emotion regulatory strategies employed by older and younger people. Older adults tend to employ antecedent-focused strategies, whereas younger adults tend to employ response-focused emotion regulation (Droulers, Lacoste-Badie, & Malek, 2015; Urry & Gross, 2010). Antecedent regulation refers to employing strategies that prevent emotions from (fully) arising.…”
Section: Age and General Media Preferencesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet changes in media preferences extend beyond that. Older people are more likely to select media content they expect is meaningful and will make them feel good (Bartsch, 2012; Droulers et al, 2015; Mares et al, 2016; Mares & Sun, 2010). Bartsch (2012) explained that “older adults become less interested in emotionally intense entertainment experiences, such as thrilling and tear-jerking experiences," and instead "become more interested in entertainment experiences that are heartwarming, contemplative, and socially meaningful (p. 589).”…”
Section: Age and General Media Preferencesmentioning
confidence: 99%