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Is Frequent Sighing an Indicator of Dispositional Negative Emotionality? A Multi-Sample, Multi-Measure Naturalistic-Observation Study

Authors :
Deanna M. Kaplan
Alexander F. Danvers
Charles L. Raison
Megan L. Robbins
Allison Mary Tackman
Matthias R. Mehl
Angelina Poslinelli
David A. Sbarra
Anne Milek
Suzanne A. Moseley
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Center for Open Science, 2021.

Abstract

Sighing is a common nonverbal everyday behavior thought to signal the experiencing of negative emotions. Prior research from a small-scale study suggests that observed daily expressions of sighing is associated with subclinical depression (Robbins, Mehl, Holleran, & Kasle, 2011). This paper replicates and extends these findings, hypothesizing that individual differences in negative emotionality are associated with frequency of spontaneous sighing. Study 1 (N = 320) documents a strong lay assumption that frequent sighing signals dispositional negative emotionality. Study 2 estimates the actual association between daily sighing, assessed naturalistically using the Electronically Activated Recorder (EAR), and negative emotionality in a large, diverse, pooled sample (N = 469). Bayesian tests across six measures (neuroticism, depression, anxiety, stress, fatigue, loneliness) strongly support the null model. Together, results suggest the common intuition that people who sigh frequently experience more negative emotionality is inaccurate. Assessing whether an individual sighs more (or less) than others cannot be used to infer that they experience more negative emotions.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7ca774f952fc2e9208feebb7414ee347