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About Linda Isbell

A fundamental assumption in my work is that affective feelings convey valuable information that guides individual thoughts, judgments, and actions. My work embraces the notion that affect and cognition are necessary allies that work in tandem to produce adaptive responses to the world. My research aims to better understand the ways in which affect influences ordinary, everyday information processing and judgment across a number of important social psychological and real-world domains. In doing so, I investigate the impact of affective experiences on how individuals seek out, process, and evaluate information about hypothetical political candidates, job applicants, ordinary people, stereotyped others, and the self. By relying on theory and research in social cognition, I identify and explore the underlying social cognitive processes that account for the different influences of affect on cognition.

Positions

Present Graduate Program Director, University of Massachusetts Amherst
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Present Professor, Department of Psychology, University of Massachusetts Amherst
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Curriculum Vitae


Disciplines


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Contact Information

Department of Psychology
University of Massachusetts
135 Hicks Way
630 Tobin Hall
Amherst, Massachusetts 01003
Tel: 413-545-5960

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