How to Use affective in a Sentence

affective

adjective
  • But there is good news from research in affective science, also known as the study of emotions.
    Philly.com, 4 June 2018
  • In goes the good desk chair from the office, and a seasonal-affective-disorder lamp.
    Rafil Kroll-Zaidi, Harper's Magazine, 15 Sep. 2020
  • The title track, which opens the album, channels that anger in a subtler, but no less affective, manner.
    Jeff Gage, Washington Post, 9 Sep. 2023
  • In these clips, actors expressed a wide range of emotions in their face, voice and body language, and participants were asked to identify the affective state of the actors.
    Julia Lee, Scientific American, 2 Oct. 2019
  • Oddly, though, in the end, Melania Trump’s speech proved powerful and moving, not in spite of all its tonal and affective contradictions, but because of them.
    Rhonda Garelick, The Cut, 22 Sep. 2017
  • Cognitive bias refers to one's thought processes (affective, which refers to the strength of an emotion or feeling toward something).
    Daniel Fallmann, Forbes, 14 June 2021
  • There is an ineluctable emotional stamp on the incipit of just about all of Brahms’ mature chamber works — the opening seconds set an affective tone that can last the entire piece.
    Lukas Schulze, San Diego Union-Tribune, 26 Aug. 2022
  • My daily affective state is one of great despair about the incredible destructive forces at work in this world — not only at the level of climate.
    David Marchese Photo Illustration By Bráulio Amado, New York Times, 14 Jan. 2024
  • The researchers are even proposing a separate name for the condition: TBI affective syndrome.
    Kaitlin Sullivan, NBC News, 5 July 2023
  • Various measures of affective polarization have shown that over the past 60 years, it’s gotten much worse.
    Christopher Mims, WSJ, 19 Oct. 2020
  • Kastner and Lee were artful in their ability to highlight subtle affective details, making the most of the unique quality of each movement.
    Luke Schulze, San Diego Union-Tribune, 29 June 2023
  • The hallmarks of a National song — wry, affective lyrics; earthquake-proof song structures; painterly arrangements — seem tailor-built to sound more graceful with age.
    Clayton Purdom, Rolling Stone, 26 Apr. 2023
  • Such sweeping, affective observations are key to Fukuyama’s style, which spurns data-heavy economics in favor of lofty arguments on the plane of ideas.
    Krithika Varagur, The New Yorker, 25 May 2022
  • As these models continue to evolve, affective computing must evolve too.
    IEEE Spectrum, 30 Apr. 2021
  • Insisting that an affective machine should somehow work like a fact-checking machine is absurd.
    Siva Vaidhyanathan, The New Republic, 5 Jan. 2021
  • The causes of affective and other forms of polarization are the subject of considerable debate.
    Daniel Kreiss, Wired, 5 Apr. 2021
  • The answer seems simple, yet a vigorous debate concerning its meaning has been playing out over the vista of affective neuroscience.
    Dean Mobbs, Scientific American, 20 Sep. 2019
  • The resulting narrative is something like an affective history of the British Empire.
    Maya Binyam, The New Yorker, 9 Oct. 2019
  • The point is not to grapple with the reality of a complex, overwhelming situation that changes every day, about which there can be genuine debates, but to reinscribe it in affective terms.
    Matthew Sitman, The New Republic, 21 May 2020
  • There is substantial evidence that emotions and affective states play a key role in advertising.
    Nazanin Andalibi, Quartz, 29 Dec. 2020
  • The third blog explored AI emotion sensors and the impact that the affective computing market is having on the transportation and logistics industry.
    Cindy Gordon, Forbes, 31 Oct. 2021
  • But the reasons can also involve a subconscious, affective attachment to specific archetypes and myths.
    The New Yorker, 28 June 2021
  • That's because, once again, people embrace the stories for their affective power, not for their ability to win the support of specialists flaunting their expertise.
    Damon Linker, The Week, 24 Feb. 2022
  • Each film channels the gaze of an amateur—which is to say, a gaze tuned like a radio channel to the affective nuances of daily living: amusement, awkwardness, delight, and the extravagant devotion of love.
    Krista Stevens, Longreads, 10 Aug. 2020
  • Jorge Cotte, way back in the show’s first season, suggested that its nauseating aesthetic was meant to produce a uniquely negative affective attachment to the show.
    Phillip MacIak, The New Republic, 26 May 2023
  • Autism today is considered a form of neurodiversity, and many parents have come to discover that their children have their own affective needs and their own ways of relating.
    Washington Post, 30 Apr. 2021
  • But while relationship and life satisfaction go down, something called affective well-being goes up.
    Garth Sundem, WIRED, 15 Mar. 2012
  • The most emotionally affective writing in this collection, in fact, comes from one of its longest entries: a recollection of the author’s father, written during a trip on the 5,772-mile Trans-Siberian Railway.
    Tom Zoellner, New York Times, 1 June 2018
  • One, known as affective polarization, measures how much people of one party dislike members of the opposite party.
    Christopher Mims, WSJ, 19 Oct. 2020
  • Seated next to a guitarist in the video, McRae gives an affective vocal performance (through a Spotify-green microphone) of the pop song's lyrics, which chronicle a fraught romantic relationship that's destined to end but doesn't.
    Jack Irvin, Peoplemag, 9 Jan. 2024

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'affective.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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