2024
DOI: 10.12688/routledgeopenres.18001.1
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Experience of regret is unaffected by concurrent working memory load

Lily FitzGibbon,
Caroline Putt,
Aidan Feeney
et al.

Abstract: Background When facing the consequences of decisions, people often experience evaluative emotions such as regret. The experience of regret is the result of the comparison between the actual outcome of one’s actions and a better counterfactual outcome that could have occurred had one acted differently in the past. Despite increasing interest in counterfactual thinking and regret, little is known about the type of cognitive processes involved with regret –whether it is underpinned by reflective or intuitive proc… Show more

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