SECTION C: VERBAL AND
LOGICAL ABILITY
Analyse the passage given
and provide an appropriate answer for the question nos. 113 through 118 that
follow.
Number of words in this
passage: 832
Every conscious mental state has a qualitative character that we refer to as mood. We are always in a mood that is pleasurable or unpleasurable to some degree. It may be that bad moods relate to their being too positive reinforcement in a person’s current life and too many punishments. In any case, moods are distinguished from emotions proper by not being tied to any specific object. But, this distinction is not watertight, in that emotions need not be directed at objects that are completely specific (we can be angry just at people generally) while there is always a sense of a mood having a general objective like the state of the world at large. Moods manifest themselves in positive or negative feelings that are tied to health, personality, or perceived quality of life. Moods can also relate to emotions proper, as in the aftermath of an emotional incident such as the failure to secure a loan. A mood on this basis is the mind’s judgment on the recent past. For Goldie, emotion can bubble up and down within a mood, while an emotion can involve characteristics that are non-object specific.
What is important for marketing is that moods colour outlook and bias judgements. Hence the importance of consumer confidence surveys, as consumer confidence typically reflects national mood. There is mood – congruence when thoughts and actions fall inline with mood. As Goleman says, there is a “constant stream of feeling” that runs “in perfect to our steam of thought”. Mood congruence occurs because a positive mood evokes pleasant associations that lighten subsequent appraisals (thoughts) and actions, while a negative arouses pessimistic associations that influence future judgement and behaviour. When consumers are in a good mood, they are more optimistic about buying more confident in buying, and much more willing to tolerate things like waiting in line. On the other hand, being in a mood makes buying behaviour in the “right mood” by the use of music and friendly staff or, say, opens bakeries in shopping malls that delight the passer-by with the smell of fresh bread.
Thayer views moods as a mixture of biological and psychological influences and, as such, a sort of clinical thermometer, reflecting all the internal and external events that influence us. For Thayer, the key components of mood are energy and tension in different combinations. A specific mixture of energy and tension, together with the thoughts they influence, produces moods. He discusses four mood states:
· Calm–energy: he regards this as the optimal mood of feeling good.
· Clam–tiredness: he regards this as feeling a little tired without any stress, which can be pleasant.
· Tense-energy: involves a low level of anxiety suited to a fight-or-flight disposition.
· Tense-tiredness: is a mixture of fatigue and anxiety, which underlines the unpleasant feeling of depression.
People generally can “feel down” or “feel good” as a result of happenings in the world around them. This represents the national mood. People feel elated when the national soccer team wins an international match or depressed when their team has lost. An elated mood of calm-energy is an optimistic mood, which is good for business. Consumers, as socially involved individuals, are deeply influenced by the prevailing social climate. Marketers recognize the phenomenon and talk about the national mood being, say for or against conspicuous consumption. Moods do change, though. Writing early in the nineteenth century, Toqeville describes an American elite embarrassed by the ostentation of material display; in the “Gilded Age”, sixty years later, many were only too eager to embrace a materialistic vulgarity. The problem lies in anticipating changes in national mood, since a change in mood affects everything from buying of equities to the buying of houses and washing machines. Thayer would argue that we should be interested in national events that are likely to produce a move toward a tense-tiredness state or toward a calm-energy state, since these are the polar extremes and are more likely to influence behaviour. Artists sensitive to national moods express the long-term changes. An example is the long – term emotional journey from Charles Dickens’s depiction of the death of little Nell to Oscar Wilde’s cruel flippancy about it. “One would have to have a heart of stone not to laugh at the death of little Nell”, which reflects the mood change from high Victorian sentimentality to the acerbic cynicism of the end of the century, as shown in writers like Thomas Hardy and artists like Aubrey Beardsley.
Whenever the mind is not fully absorbed, consciousness is no longer focused and ordered. Under such conditions the mind falls into dwelling on the unpleasant, with a negative mood developing.
Csikszentimihalyi argues that humans need to keep consciousness fully active is what influences a good deal of consumer behaviour. Sometimes it does not matter what we are shopping for - the point is to shop for anything, regardless, as consuming is one way to respond to the void in consciousness when there is nothing else to do.
113. Which one of the following statements best summarizes the above passage?
(A) The passage highlights how moods affect nations.
(B) The passage draws distinction between moods and emotions.
(C) Some writers influenced national moods through their writings.
(D) Thayer categorized moods into four states.
(E) The passage highlights the importance of moods and emotions in marketing.
Explanatory Note:
The passage is about the importance
of moods and emotions in framing marketing strategies. In this context
statements A B C and D fail to summarize the passage. Choice
(E)
114. What is “moods congruence”?
(A) When moods and emotions are synchronized.
(B) When emotions are synchronous with actions and thoughts.
(C) When moods are synchronous with thoughts and actions.
(D) When moods are synchronous with thoughts but not with action.
(E) When moods are synchronous with action but not with thought.
Explanatory Note:
‘Moods Congruence’ is when moods are
synchronous with thoughts and actions. Refer para 2 sentence 3. Choice (C)
115. Implication and Proposition are
defined as follows:
Implication: a statement which follows from
the given text.
Proposition: a statement which forms a part
of the given text.
Consider the two statements below and decide
whether they are implications or propositions.
I. The marketers should
understand and make use of moods and emotions in designing and selling products
and services.
II. Consuming is nothing but way of filling the
void in consciousness.
(A) Both statements are implications.
(B) First is implication
second is proposition.
(C) Both are propositions.
(D) First is
proposition, second is implication.
(E) Both are neither
implication nor proposition.
Explanatory
Note:
The passage is describing how the
wood of consumers change their buying pattern. Hence, I follows from the given
text.
It is mentioned in the passage that
consuming is one way to respond to the void in consciousness but nowhere it is
mentioned that this is the only purpose of consumption. Hence, II is not a
preposition but an implication. Choice (A)
116. Which statements from the ones
given below are correct?
1. In general, emotions
are object specific.
2. In general, moods
are not object specific.
3. Moods and emotions are same.
4. As per Thayer, moods
are a mix of biological and psychological influence.
(A) 1,2,4 (B) 1,2,3
(C) 2,3,4 (D) 2,4,3
(E) All four are right
Explanatory
Note:
While
distinguishing moods from emotions, it is stated that moods are not tied to any
specific objects. This implies emotions are tied to specific objects. Hence,
(1) and (2) are correct and (3) is incorrect. (4) is the first two lines of the
third paragraph.
\
(1), (2) and (4) are correct. Choice
(A)
117. The statement “Moods provide
energy for human actions” is ______.
(A) always right
(B) always wrong
(C) not derived from the passage.
(D) contradictory.
(E) sometimes right.
Explanatory Note:
Among the
four mood states defined two provide energy and two provide tiredness. But it
is not stated that mood provides energy. Hence, the statement cannot be derived
from the passage. Choice
(C)
118. Which of the following is the closest
to “conspicuous consumption” in the passage?
(A) Audible consumption
(B) Consumption driven
by moods and emotions
(C) Socially responsible consumption
(D) Private but not public consumption
(E) consumption of
material items of impressing others
Explanatory Note:
The passage
is relating changes in consumption to the mood. Hence, (B) is the closest. Choice (B)