Abstract
While sadness and anger are distinct emotional states, the cognitive traits that differentiate people prone to one versus the other are not well understood. This research tested whether the cognitive signatures of state emotions extend to the trait level. Across two studies, we developed and validated a new Trait Sadness Scale (TSS) and used it to compare the cognitive responses of a sadness-prone group (high sadness, low anger) and an anger-prone group (high anger, low sadness) to ambiguous negative events. Contrary to predictions from state emotion theories, the groups did not differ in their causal attribution patterns (i.e., who they blamed). However, key cognitive differences did emerge: the sadness-prone group reported significantly greater helplessness, an effect specific to interpersonal contexts, and appraised the causes of negative events as more stable and global. These findings reveal a dissociation between state- and trait-level cognition, suggesting that emotional dispositions are differentiated not by simple patterns of blame, but by a more complex interplay of context-dependent appraisals of control and a pessimistic explanatory style.