4 groups of Ss were exposed to a probability learning situation in which they guessed which of 2 stimuli would next appear. 1 set of stimuli contained angry and smiling faces, while the other or neutral set contained big and little kangaroos. When the input ratio was 70% angry faces to 30% smiling faces, Ss markedly underestimated the dominant input. When the ratio was reversed (70% smiling, 30% angry), expectancies for the dominant stimulus approximated objective input. Thus, relative preferences for the stimuli appeared to dictate expectations. Expectancy curves for the relatively neutral kangaroos fell between the curves for the affective stimuli. Considerable inter-individual variability was found for affective expectancies. These individual differences were tentatively associated with personality differences. (31 ref.) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)