“…Instead, the most intense ('peak') and final ('end') emotional fluctuations are typically weighted more heavily than other timepoints (i.e., the peak-end effect).Moreover, the temporal duration of emotional experiences plays a seemingly minor role in sculpting retrospective emotion-for instance, prolonging aversive emotional episodes does not necessarily yield corresponding increases in the magnitude of remembered negative emotion (i.e., suggesting duration neglect; . These biases have often been replicated (peak-end effect: Asutay et al, 2020Asutay et al, , 2021Chajut et al, 2014;Do et al, 2008;Finn, 2010;Hsu et al, 2018;Kahneman et al, 1993;Redelmeier & Kahneman, 1996;Scheibehenne & Coppin, 2020; duration neglect: Redelmeier & Kahneman, 1996;Scheibehenne & Coppin, 2020, but see also: Ben-Zeev et al, 2009;Miron-Shatz, 2009).…”