8 Examples of Affective Forecasting
Affective forecasting is something we all do every day. We do it even without noticing.
Don’t believe me? As an experiment, try selecting a day on which you commit to noticing all the times you predict your feelings about a future event. Each time you catch yourself anticipating a future emotional experience, jot down a few notes about your prediction.
Signs that you may be engaging in affective forecasting are if you find yourself experiencing a physical reaction in response to future-focused thoughts. For instance, perhaps you might notice your heart race a little in anticipation of a romantic dinner date.
These physical reactions occur because presently felt emotions sometimes signal the emotions we expect to feel in the future. Such emotions are referred to as anticipatory emotions (Davis, Love, & Maddox, 2009).
Therefore, your racing heart in anticipation of your upcoming date may be because you feel excited. Alternatively, your heart may be pounding due to nervousness or a feeling of dread–two more examples of anticipatory emotions.
Taking a day to experiment with affective forecasting in this way will not only help you better understand the concept but double as an opportunity to practice a little mindfulness, thereby allowing you to become aware of your own cognitions and anticipatory emotions.
To help you, here are some examples of affective forecasting you may observe in a typical day:
- You think about an upcoming holiday and look forward to relaxing mornings and fun, excitement-filled nights in paradise.
- Dreading a visit to the dentist, you feel your palms grow sweaty as you anticipate the discomfort and pain of having your teeth cleaned.
- You wake up and look forward to your morning coffee, anticipating the jolt it will give you to start your day.
- You observe yourself growing nervous about a presentation at work, predicting that you will feel fearful speaking in front of an audience.
- You feel impatient as you wait for your baby to be born and expecting to feel joy, happiness, and peace after the birth.
- As you wait at a local coffee shop, you look forward to the arrival of an old friend and expect to feel contentment and nostalgia as you discuss memories of high school.
- Alternatively, you may worry what your old friend will think of your current life and circumstances, expecting to feel embarrassed or, ashamed when comparing achievements.
- In the stands at a heated football game, you expect to feel delighted when your favorite team wins the match.
Studies on Affective Forecasting
Much of the existing work in affective forecasting has answered questions regarding how accurately we make predictions about our future emotions.
Further, it considers the factors most likely to bias or support accurate predictions.
In what follows, these supportive or hindering factors are considered according to each of affective forecasting’s four defining components–valence, specific emotions, intensity, and duration.
Studies on the Accuracy of Predicted Valence
For the most part, we are typically good at predicting where our emotional experiences will lie on a basic spectrum from pleasant to unpleasant.
For example, Wilson and colleagues (2002) staged a simulated dating game, whereby university students competed for a hypothetical date with an opposite-sex student. Whether a student won or lost the date was actually randomized.
Prior to competing, participants forecasted the valence of their mood if they won versus if they lost. As one might expect, all forecasters anticipated that they would feel positive if they won, and indeed, this is what they were shown to feel.
While this finding may seem obvious, there are factors stemming from our past experiences, present-moment experiences, and environment that may lead us to make inaccurate predictions regarding even the basic valence of our emotions (more on this later).
Studies on the Accuracy of Specific Predicted Emotions
Overall, research indicates that we tend to have narrow, simplistic ideas about the specific emotions we will feel in the future, leading us to make inaccurate predictions.
One driver of these inaccurate predictions is temporal distance. That is, how far in the future a specific event is situated.
According to findings from Liberman, Sagristano, and Trope (2002), people tend to be poorer at forecasting the specific emotions they will experience in response to events that are planned in the far-off future. In these situations, we tend to construe such anticipated emotions more broadly under categories like ‘positive’ and ‘negative,’ rather than identifying the specific emotions.
These errors and biases can be confusing, disorienting, and cause us to lose trust in our own ability to predict and manage our emotions.
Studies on the Accuracy of Predicted Emotion Intensity
In the same way that people are ineffective at predicting specific emotions, we are also poor at estimating the intensity of our future emotional experiences–a tendency often referred to as the “intensity bias” (Loewenstein & Schkade, 1999).
To illustrate this phenomenon, Woodzicka and LaFrance (2001) found that while most women could accurately predict the emotions they would feel when asked a sexually inappropriate question by a job interviewer, their predictions regarding these emotions’ intensity were inaccurate. More specifically, the women predicted they would primarily feel anger, followed by fear, but fear was the more intensely felt emotion in reality.
To draw on more findings, Buehler and McFarland (2001) found that university students who anticipated they would feel positive upon learning their final grade for a course overestimated the intensity with which it would make them feel positive. These scholars replicated the result when asking students to predict the intensity with which they would feel positive about their future experience of Christmas Day.
In this second study, the authors found that students who exhibited a narrower temporal focus were more likely to make these inaccurate predictions. More specifically, those who reported focusing exclusively on the upcoming holiday while neglecting to consider experiences of past holidays when making their forecasts were more likely to overestimate the intensity of their positive future emotions.
Once again, this result points to the importance of time horizons (and the attention we pay to them) as factors that may impact affective forecasting accuracy.
Studies on the Accuracy of Predicted Emotion Duration
Studies show that people tend to overestimate the duration for which they will experience anticipated emotions. This bias, termed the “durability bias” (Gilbert, Pinel, Wilson, Blumberg, & Wheatly, 1998), has been shown to apply to the forecasting of both positive and negative emotions.
In one study, Ayton, Pott, and Elwakili (2007) found that those who failed their driving tests overestimated the duration of their disappointment. Interestingly, test-takers who had failed their test previously were just as poor at predicting the duration of their disappointment as those who were failing for the first time. This finding suggests that emotions may be one area where past experience does not always accurately inform expectations.
Interestingly, research has shown that people are prone to both overestimate the intensity of forecasted emotions and the duration of felt emotions. That is, we tend to exhibit both the intensity and durability biases at the same time.
To facilitate discussion of these two biases in combination, Wilson and colleagues (2000) coined the term “impact bias” in a study of college sports fans. In the study, fans were shown to overestimate not only how happy they would be after their favorite team won the game, but also how long the feelings of happiness would last.
The research is clear. We’re pretty ineffective at predicting our future emotions. But the question remains: Why is this the case?
What our readers think
This was a great article to read! I almost want to say life-changing. Stumbled on this while researching why I feel my emotions so strongly even when I imagine a future occurrence, and I ended the article with a lot more understanding of how affective forecasting has shaped my decisions and affected my happiness. I was especially taken aback to read that “emotions may be one area where past experience does not accurately inform expectations”. There’s so much to learn about human behaviour. Thank you for sharing.
Thanks for sharing. It is really amazing.
Reading Csikszentmihalyi I thought having more flow in my life would make me happier, and chess was one of his first examples of “experiences … rewarding in themselves… [that] provide little worlds of their own that are enjoyable.” So my “affective forecast” was that playing on chess.com would make me happier. Instead I ended up with massive stress, frustration, and an internet addiction… in sum, much less happier. It may be that chess playing just isn’t for me, even though I have a physics degree and used to enjoy it, and beat all my friends at it, as a kid. I was not that bad on chess.com as an “old beginner” making it to the top 20% of players on the site within weeks, and playing against people where my skills and challenge were perfectly balanced, as “flow theory” suggests is “ideal”. But I still felt extremely stressed out and very frustrated over the game. I’ve now stopped playing “cold turkey” and spending the time saved reading up on more positive psychology to see if there’s anything out there that actually works to improve happiness. Given that the “father of PP” set me on the wrong path of chess, this shows that I at least have some hope and optimism! Has anyone out there found an activity that they forecast would greatly increase their long term happiness, and it actually has?
We are caught in this constant pursuit of happiness. Chasing after “the next big thing” we think will make us happy. New car, new TV, new house or even a new partner… And although, as illustrated nicely in this article, most of the time we are right in terms of what will make us happy, we definitely overestimate the impact that particular event will have on our lives.
We believe that the true happiness lies in embracing all emotions. There are there for a reason and enable us to fully engage with life.
We just need to learn how to become friends with them.
Hi Joanna,
I totally agree with you. Most of the time we are right in terms of what makes us happy because we know our likes and dislikes. At the same time, our expectations are overestimated. In stead of chasing what we think will bring us happiness, I think that we should enjoy the present and appreciate what we have. I think you are right about that we need to learn how to become friends with all emotions. You have pointed out an excellent point!