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Psychology Commons

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Personality and Social Contexts

1988

University of New Hampshire

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Articles 1 - 5 of 5

Full-Text Articles in Psychology

Brief Mood Introspection Scale (Bmis): Open-Source Code, John D. Mayer Jan 1988

Brief Mood Introspection Scale (Bmis): Open-Source Code, John D. Mayer

UNH Personality Lab

This is computer code for analyzing the Brief Mood Introspection Scale (BMIS) data files for the R Statistical Environment open source software.


Technical Notes On R-Based Reanalysis Of The Brief Mood Introspection Scale (Bmis) Of Mayer & Gaschke, 1998, Study 1, John D. Mayer Jan 1988

Technical Notes On R-Based Reanalysis Of The Brief Mood Introspection Scale (Bmis) Of Mayer & Gaschke, 1998, Study 1, John D. Mayer

UNH Personality Lab

Notes regarding the creation of the Brief Mood Introspection Scale (BMIS) and data published in the original article Mayer, J. D., & Gaschke, Y. N. (1988). The experience and meta-experience of mood. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 55, 102-111.


Brief Mood Introspection Scale (Bmis): Scoring Instructions, John D. Mayer Jan 1988

Brief Mood Introspection Scale (Bmis): Scoring Instructions, John D. Mayer

UNH Personality Lab

The BMIS scale is an open-source mood scale consisting of 16 mood-adjectives to which a person responds (e.g., Are you "happy"?). The scale can yield measures of overall pleasant-unpleasant mood, arousal-calm mood, and it also can be scored according to positive-tired and negative-calm mood.


Brief Mood Introspection Scale (Bmis): Open-Source Data, John D. Mayer, Yvonne N. Gaschke Jan 1988

Brief Mood Introspection Scale (Bmis): Open-Source Data, John D. Mayer, Yvonne N. Gaschke

UNH Personality Lab

Mood experience is comprised of at least two elements: the direct experience of the mood and a meta-level of experience that consists of thoughts and feelings about the mood. In Study 1, a two-dimensional structure for the direct experience of mood (Watson & Tellegen, 1985) was tested for its fit to the responses of 1,572 subjects who each completed one of the three different mood scales, including a brief scale developed to assist future research. The Watson and Tellegen structure was supported across all three scales. In Study 2, meta-mood experience was conceptualized as the product of a mood regulatory …


The Brief Mood Introspection Scale (Bmis), John D. Mayer, Yvonne N. Gaschke Jan 1988

The Brief Mood Introspection Scale (Bmis), John D. Mayer, Yvonne N. Gaschke

UNH Personality Lab

The BMIS scale is an open-source mood scale consisting of 16 mood-adjectives to which a person responds (e.g., Are you "happy"?). The scale can yield measures of overall pleasant-unpleasant mood, arousal-calm mood, and it also can be scored according to positive-tired and negative-calm mood.