Changing time and emotions

Pre-print, Working paper: In this paper, we consider that our experience of time (to come) depends on the emotions we feel when we imagine future pleasant or unpleasant events. A positive emotion such as relief or joy associated with a pleasant event that will happen in the future induces impatience. Impatience, in our context, implies that the experience of time up to the forthcoming event expands. A negative emotion such as grief or frustration associatedwith an unpleasant event thatwill happen in the future triggers anxiety. This will give the experience of time contraction. Time, therefore, is not exogeneously given to the individual and emotions, which link together events or situations, are a constitutive ingredient of time experience. Our theory can explain experimental evidence which shows that people tend to prefer to perform painful actions earlier than pleasurable ones, contrary to the predictions yielded by the standard exponential discounting framework.

Author(s)

Pierre-Yves Geoffard, Stephane Luchini

Date of publication
  • 2007
Keywords JEL
D01 D91
Keywords
  • Experience of time
  • Emotions
  • Impatience
  • Anxiety
  • Discount factor
  • Time preference
Internal reference
  • PSE Working Papers n°2007-32
Version
  • 1