Time pervades every aspect of peoples lives. We are all affected by remnants of our pasts, assessments of our presents, and forecasts of our futures. Our thoughts, feelings and behaviours over time inexorably intertwine and intermingle, determining varied reactions such as affect and emotions, as well as future behaviours. The purpose of this volume is to bring together the diverse theory and research of an outstanding group of scholars whose work relates to peoples judgements overtime. To date, much theory and research on temporal variables within psychology has remained somewhat fragmented, isolated and even provincial - researchers in particular domains are either unaware of or are paying little attention to each others work. Integrating the theory and research into asingle volume will bring about a greater awareness and appreciation of conceptual relations between seemingly disparate topics, define and promote the state of scientific knowledge in these areas, and set the agenda for future work. The volume presents the two main ways of looking at judgments over time:: looking at how peoples thoughts about the future and the past affect their present states, and looking at the interplay over time among peoples thoughts, feelings and behaviours.
Past as Prologue: An Introduction to Judgements Over Time; Part I: Thinking about the future; Abandoning Optimism in Predictions About the Future; Defensive Pessimism: Positive Past, Anxious Present, and Pessimistic Future; Pursuing a Path to a More Perfect Future: On Causes, Correlates and Consequences of Perfectionism; Predicting Feelings Versus Choices; Considering Future Consequences: An Integrative Model; Hope Over Time; Fantasy Realization and the Bridging of Time; Part II: Thinking About the Past; Extending the Goal Progress Theory of Rumination: Goal Reevaluation and Growth; The Road Not Taken: Counterfactual Thinking Over Time; Explaining the Past, Predicting the Future; Looking Backwards With an Eye on the Future: Propositions Towards a Theory of Regret Regulation; Looking Back on What We Knew and When We Knew It: The Role of Time in the Development of Hindsight Bias; How Do You Feel About It Now and When Did It Happen? Judgments of Emotion and Judgments of Time in Autobiographical Memory; Remembering and Misremembering Emotions; Future as Epilogue: Some Conclusions on Judgments Over Time;
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