Publications

In Press
Zimmerman P, Lerner JS. The emotional decision maker. Government Executive. In Press.Abstract
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govt_exec_edit_6-151_ks_999wds-_pz_6-28.docx.final_.pdf
Lerner JS, Li Y, Weber EU. The Financial Cost of Sadness. In Press.Abstract
Hundreds of studies have examined the “sadder-but-wiser” hypothesis—that sad people make wiser decisions—and most find support for it. But virtually no tests of the hypothesis examined financial decisions, which are some of the most frequent and consequential decisions people make. To address this gap, the present experiments examined the effects of sadness on intertemporal financial choices of the form $X now versus $(X+Y) later—typical of the choices people make when considering whether to spend now or save to spend more later. Studies of intertemporal choices typically reveal extreme impatience. That is, people choose earlier rewards over significantly larger, later rewards, often leading to regret. Would sadness reverse the typical impatience pattern in choices—by increasing wisdom and decreasing impatience—per the sadder-but-wiser hypothesis? Three experiments tested the hypothesis, inducing sadness in randomly assigned participants and then offering participants an intertemporal financial choice unrelated to the source of sadness. Each experiment found that sadness dramatically increased impatience: Relative to the median neutral-mood participant, the median sad-mood participant was willing to accept 35% to 79% less money today to avoid waiting for a payoff. Sadness increased impatience even though the emotion was normatively irrelevant to the choice. In sum, sadder is not wiser when it comes to making tradeoffs between time and money.
financial_cost_of_sadness_psych_science.pdf
Carnevale J, Inbar Y, Lerner JS. Individual differences in need for cognition and decision making competence among leaders. Personality Assessment and Individual Differences. In Press.Abstract
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paid_leadership_paper.pdf
Sherman G, Lee J, Cuddy AJC, Renshon J, Oveis C, Gross J, Lerner J. Leadership is Associated with Lower Levels of Stress. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. In Press.
Renshon JB, Lerner JS. The role of emotion in foreign policy decision making. In: Christie DJ Encyclopedia of Peace Psychology. Malden, MA: Blackwell; In Press.Abstract
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the_role_of_emotions_in_foreign_policy_decision_making.final_.pdf
Garg K, Lerner JS. Sadness and Consumption. Journal of Consumer Psychology. In Press. sadness_and_consumption.pdf
Lerner JS. When emotions run high. Negotiation. In Press;13:8.Abstract
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Submitted
Han S, Lerner JS, Zeckhauser R. Disgust promotes disposal: Souring the status quo. Journal of Risk and Uncertainty . Submitted;44(2):101-113.Abstract
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the_disgust-promotes-disposal_effect_han-lerner-zeckhauser.pdf
Sherman G, Lee J, Cuddy A, Renshon J, Oveis C, Gross J, Lerner JS. Leadership is Associated with Lower Levels of the Stress Hormone Cortisol. Submitted.
Lerner JS, Lib Y, Weber EU. Sadder, but Not Wiser: The Myopia of Misery. Submitted.Abstract
Abstract Hundreds of studies have examined the “sadder-but-wiser” hypothesis—that sad people make wiser decisions—and most find support for it. However, such studies typically examined judgments and decisions in domains without precisely quantifiable, normative standards of “wisdom.” Moreover, virtually no tests of the hypothesis examined financial decisions, arguably the most frequent and consequential decisions people make. To address these gaps, the present experiments examined the effects of sadness on intertemporal financial choices of the form $X now versus $(X+Y) later—typical of the choices people make when considering whether to spend now or save to spend more later. Studies of intertemporal choices typically reveal extreme impatience. That is, people typically choose earlier rewards over significantly larger, later rewards, leading to regret. Would sadness reverse the typical pattern by increasing wisdom and decreasing impatience—per the sadder-but-wiser hypothesis? Three experiments show the opposite and quantify the exact financial disadvantage of sadness: Whereas the median neutral-mood participant was indifferent between receiving $19 today and $100 in a year, the median sad-mood participant became indifferent at only $4 today. Moreover, sadness increased impatience even though the emotion was normatively irrelevant to the choice. In sum, sadder is not wiser when it comes to making tradeoffs between time and money, calling into question the otherwise long-supported view that “sadder is wiser.” Explanations and implications are discussed.
myopia_of_misery_pnas_final.doc
Garg N, Lerner JS. Sadness and consumption. Submitted.Abstract
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sadness_and_consumption.pdf
2012
Lerner J, Renshon J. The Role of Emotions in Foreign Policy Decision Making. In: Encyclopedia of Peace Psychology . ; 2012.
Lerner J, Renshon J. The Role of Emotions in Foreign Policy Decision Making. In: Encyclopedia of Peace Psychology . ; 2012. role_of_emotions.pdf
2011
Lerner JS, Taylor SE, Lai L, Stayn HB. Emotion, physiological reactivity and visceral self-perception. 2011.Abstract
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Bruin de Bruine W, Fischhoff B, Downs J, Florig K, Mandel D, Lerner JS. Examining unintended consequences of risk communications that evoke fear - a bi-national study. 2011.Abstract
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Lerner JS, Li Y, Weber E. Sadder but wiser? The myopic misery effect. 2011.Abstract
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2010
Keltner D, Lerner JS. Emotion. In: Gilbert DT, Fiske ST, Lindzey G The Handbook of Social Psychology. New York: Wiley; 2010. p. 317-352.Abstract
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c09.pdf
Litvak P, Lerner JS, Tiedens LZ, Shonk K. Fuel in the fire: How anger impacts judgment and decision making. In: Potegal M, Stemmler G, Spielberger C International Handbook of Anger. New York: Springer; 2010. p. 287-311.Abstract
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Lerner JS, Shonk K. How anger poisons decision making. Harvard Business Review. 2010;88:26.Abstract
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Winterich K, Han S, Lerner JS. Now that I’m sad, it’s hard to be mad: The role of cognitive appraisals in emotional blunting. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin. 2010;36:1467-1483.Abstract
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kwinterich_emotional_blunting_pspb_09-246_6.7.10.pdf
2009
Han S, Lerner JS. Accountability and medical decision making. In: Kattan M The Encyclopedia of Medical Decision Making, Vol. 1. Washington, D.C.: SAGE; 2009. p. 7-9.Abstract
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Litvak P, Lerner JS. Cognitive bias. In: The Oxford Companion to Emotion and the Affective Sciences. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2009. p. 90.Abstract
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cognitive_bias_oxford_companion.pdf
Han S, Lerner JS. Decision making. In: Sander D, Scherer K The Oxford Companion to Emotion and the Affective Sciences. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2009. p. 111-113.Abstract
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decision_making_oxford_companion.pdf
Cryder C, Lerner JS. Uncertainty. In: The Oxford Companion to Emotion and the Affective Sciences. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2009. p. 395.Abstract
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uncertainty_oxford_companion.pdf

Pages