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The psychology of passion: A meta-analytical review of a decade of research on intrapersonal outcomes

Motivation and Emotion, ISSN: 0146-7239, Vol: 39, Issue: 5, Page: 631-655
2015
  • 320
    Citations
  • 3
    Usage
  • 420
    Captures
  • 7
    Mentions
  • 2
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    320
    • Citation Indexes
      320
      • CrossRef
        206
      • Academic Citation Index (ACI) - airiti
        7
  • Usage
    3
  • Captures
    420
  • Mentions
    7
    • Blog Mentions
      4
      • Blog
        4
    • News Mentions
      3
      • News
        3
  • Social Media
    2
    • Shares, Likes & Comments
      2
      • Facebook
        2

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Article Description

It is just over a decade since Vallerand et al. (J Personal Soc Psychol 85:756–767, 2003) introduced the dualistic model of passion. In this study, we conduct a meta-analytical review of relationships between Vallerand et al’s two passions (viz. harmonious and obsessive), and intrapersonal outcomes, and test the moderating role of age, gender, domain, and culture. A systematic literature search yielded 94 studies, within which 27 criterion variables were reported. These criterion variables derived from four research areas within the intrapersonal sphere: (a) well-/ill-being, (b) motivation factors, (c) cognitive outcomes and, (d) behaviour and performance. From these areas we retrieved 1308 independent effect sizes and analysed them using random-effects models. Results showed harmonious passion positively corresponded with positive intrapersonal outcomes (e.g., positive affect, flow, performance). Obsessive passion, conversely, showed positive associations with positive and negative intrapersonal outcomes (e.g., negative affect, rumination, vitality). Correlations were largely invariant across age and gender, but certain relationships were moderated by domain and culture. Implications are discussed.

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