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emotion

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Dictionary: e·mo·tion   (ĭ-mō'shən) pronunciation
n.
  1. A mental state that arises spontaneously rather than through conscious effort and is often accompanied by physiological changes; a feeling: the emotions of joy, sorrow, reverence, hate, and love.
  2. A state of mental agitation or disturbance: spoke unsteadily in a voice that betrayed his emotion. See synonyms at feeling.
  3. The part of the consciousness that involves feeling; sensibility: "The very essence of literature is the war between emotion and intellect" (Isaac Bashevis Singer).

[French émotion, from Old French, from esmovoir, to excite, from Vulgar Latin *exmovēre : Latin ex-, ex- + Latin movēre, to move.]


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An umbrella concept in the common language, typically defined by instantiation by reference to a variety of mental and behavioral states. These range from lust to a sense of liking, from joy to hostile aggression, and from esthetic appreciation to disgust. Emotions are usually considered to be accompanied by some degree of internal, frequently visceral, excitement, as well as strong evaluative components. Emotions are also often described as irrational, that is, not subject to deliberative cogitation, and as interfering with normal thought processes.

These latter qualities are often exacerbated in the emotional behavior and expression seen in clinical cases. The expression of strong emotions is typically considered to be symptomatic of some underlying conflict, and even the positive emotions are used as indices of unusually strong attachments and atypical earlier experiences. Sigmund Freud introduced the concept of repression to describe a defense mechanism against the occurrence of strong emotional experiences. From the psychoanalytic point of view, what is repressed is not the emotion itself, since the very concept of emotion implies conscious experience, but rather the memory of an event which, if it became conscious, would lead to strong conflicts and emotional consequences. Many other defense mechanisms, such as rationalization and compulsive or obsessive neurotic symptoms, are also seen as serving the purpose of avoiding conscious conflict and emotional sequelae. See also Psychoanalysis.


World of the Body: emotion
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Emotion has usually, in the European- American tradition, been seen as the opposite of reason; the definitions provided in the Oxford English Dictionary emphasize emotion as agitation, perturbation, and ‘feeling’ or ‘affection’ — as distinguished from cognitive or volitional states of consciousness. Philosophically this split became entrenched through the thought of Rene Descartes, with his famous ‘I think, therefore I am’. Emotion has thus come to be associated with the body the way reason has been associated with the mind.

The European-American tradition often values reason over emotion, except in specifically defined events such as funerals, weddings, or births. Some cultures, notably that of Japan, are even more reserved, wanting to avoid negative emotional expression altogether. Other cultures, especially those of South and Latin America, and some south-east Asian cultures, see emotional expression as essential to living life, and value a wide range of emotional experience.

Emotion's connection to the body is frequently reinforced through our metaphoric description of emotion; it is frequently described as a visceral event. Disappointment means a sinking heart; nervousness, butterflies in the stomach; depression, weight in the chest area; joy, lightness and freedom of movement; excitement, racing heart and blood and tingling nerves. Emotions are conveyed to others through bodily configurations, including facial expressions, posture, muscle tension, voice tone, and gestures.

While emotions and their physical expression are culturally specific (especially gestures), studies have suggested that facial expressions are remarkably similar across cultures, with the biggest differences or confusions occurring for anger or surprise. We learn to identify and reproduce facial expressions as infants, where we study the expressions on adult faces and learn to associate them with emotions. Western cultures have long attributed special emotional intelligence and capability to women, who have traditionally borne the largest burden of emotional work in the culture.

Emotion frequently plays an important role in religious ritual. Many Christian sects revere emotional ecstasy as a direct encounter with the Holy Spirit and an expression of our oneness with God. Buddhism, on the other hand, rejects both self-denial and self-indulgence in a quest to extinguish the craving for physical or material pleasures. Religious emotion is often balanced through paired rituals; Catholic cultures often have a festival period preceding the asceticism of Lent.

— Julie Vedder

Thesaurus: emotion
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noun

    A complex and usually strong subjective response, such as love or hate: affection, affectivity, feeling, sentiment. See feelings.

Antonyms: emotion
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n

Definition: mental state
Antonyms: physicality


Dental Dictionary: emotion
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n

A complex feeling or state (affect) accompanied by characteristic motor and glandular activities; feelings; mood.


Affective aspect of consciousness. The emotions are generally understood as representing a synthesis of subjective experience, expressive behaviour, and neurochemical activity. Most researchers hold that they are part of the human evolutionary legacy and serve adaptive ends by adding to general awareness and the facilitation of social communication. Some nonhuman animals are also considered to possess emotions, as first described by Charles Darwin in 1872. An influential early theory of emotion was that proposed independently by William James and Carl Georg Lange (1834 – 1900), who held that emotion was a perception of internal physiological reactions to external stimuli. Walter B. Cannon questioned this view and directed attention to the thalamus as a possible source of emotional content. Later researchers have focused on the brain-stem structure known as the reticular formation, which serves to integrate brain activity and may infuse perceptions or actions with emotional valence. Cognitive psychologists have emphasized the role of comparison, matching, appraisal, memory, and attribution in the forming of emotions. All modern theorists agree that emotions influence what people perceive, learn, and remember, and that they play an important part in personality development. Cross-cultural studies have shown that, whereas many emotions are universal, their specific content and manner of expression vary considerably.

For more information on emotion, visit Britannica.com.

The typical human emotions include love, grief, fear, anger, joy. Each indicates a state of some kind of arousal, a state that can prompt some activities and interfere with others. These states are associated with characteristic feelings, and they have characteristic bodily expressions. Unlike moods they have objects: one grieves over some particular thing, or is angry at something. Different philosophical theories have tended to highlight one or other of these aspects of emotion. Pure arousal theory imagines a visceral reaction triggered by some event, which stands ready to be converted into one emotion or another by contextual factors. Theories based on the feel or qualia of an emotion were put forward by writers such as Hume and Kant, but the approach meets difficulty when we consider that an emotion is not a raw feel, but is identified by its motivational powers, and their function in prompting action. The characteristic expression of emotion was studied extensively by Darwin, resulting in the classic The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals (1872). In 1884 James published what became known as the James-Lange theory of emotion whose main contention is that we feel as we do in virtue of the bodily expressions and behaviour that we are prompted towards, rather than the other way round: ‘our feeling of the changes as they occur is the emotion’. Again it is not clear how such a theory would accommodate the directed, cognitive side of emotions that have a specific object, rather than being simply the experience of bodily change. Directly opposing this some philosophers have put forward a purely cognitive theory of the emotions, derived from Stoicism, seeing them simply as judgments: fear of the dog is no more than the judgement that it is dangerous or a threat to one's well-being. The Stoics thought that as judgements the emotions were typically false, but modern cognitive theories tend to be more generous to them, often influenced by the idea that our capacity for emotions is often an admirable moral adaptation. Other questions concern the cultural variability of emotion, and the dependence of some emotions, but not all, on the existence of linguistically adequate modes of expression and self-interpretation.

A complex state of arousal that occurs as a reaction to a perceived situation. In its most obvious manifestation, an emotion is an acute condition characterized by disruption of routine experience and activities; as such, emotions may provoke subjective feelings of pleasure or displeasure, physiological responses (such as changes in heart rate), and behavioural responses. There is much disagreement as to the exact nature of emotions and how they differ from motives and distractions, but there is no doubt that emotions may have an organizing or disorganizing effect on performance in sport.

 
emotion, term commonly and loosely used to denote individual, subjective feelings which dictate moods. In psychology, emotion is considered a response to stimuli that involves characteristic physiological changes-such as increase in pulse rate, rise in body temperature, greater or less activity of certain glands, change in rate of breathing-and tends in itself to motivate the individual toward further activity. Early psychological studies of emotion tried to determine whether a certain emotion arose before the action, simultaneously with it, or as a response to automatic physiological processes. In the 1960s, the Schachter-Singer theory pointed out that cognitive processes, not just physiological reactions, played a significant role in determining emotions. Robert Plutchik developed (1980) a theory showing eight primary human emotions: joy, acceptance, fear, submission, sadness, disgust, anger, and anticipation, and argued that all human emotions can be derived from these. Psychologists Sylvan Tomkins (1963) and Paul Ekman (1982) have contended that "basic" emotions can be quantified because all humans employ the same facial muscles when expressing a particular emotion. Studies done by Ekman suggest that muscular feedback from a facial expression characteristic of a certain emotion results in the experience of that emotion. Since emotions are abstract and subjective, however, they remain difficult to quantify: some theories point out that non-Western cultural groups experience emotions quite distinct from those generally seen as "basic" in the West.


Psychoanalysis: Emotion
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The word emotion is derived from the Latin emovere, "to set in motion." It initially referred to the idea of physical movement and then assumed a figurative meaning associated with mental movement.

The term is infrequently used in psychoanalysis, where the term affect, derived from German Affekt, is preferred. Sigmund Freud, however, in a text written in French in 1895, used the expression "étatémotif" ("emotive state") to designate what was translated in the German editions as Affekt. It is with the theoretical developments associated with Kleinian psychoanalysis that the term emotion reappeared. The reasons for the change are significant.

Freudian metapsychology is centered on the study of the mental apparatus, which is considered, if not as an isolated entity, at least as one that can be isolate. In the Freudian model the mental apparatus is charged with drives, whose effects—affect and representation—are observable. Affect corresponds to the quantitative aspects, and mental representations correspond to the qualitative aspects of the drives. Positive affects accompany the satisfaction of drives, negative affects accompany the state of tension within the mental apparatus (pleasure/unpleasure principle). The object of satisfaction, that is, the object that triggers the discharge of the impulse, is contingent, vicarious. For Daniel Widlöcher, the affect refers to internal regulatory functions of the mental apparatus: a discharge of impulses and signals intended to provide information to the mental apparatus, as Freud suggested in his second theory of anxiety, and that emotion adds a third reference, that of communication with the external object, "a modality of expression intended to inform others of a particular situation, laden with value for the subject."

It should come as no surprise therefore that the theories assigning greater importance to object relations have given a central place to the concept of emotion. Compared to affect, it contains levels of additional complexity, because it is a means of communicative exchange between self and other, through its behavioral (especially facial) expressions, which have been extensively studied by specialists in development and cognitive function, and because it refers to nuanced qualitative aspects rather than simply quantitative aspects combined with a positive or negative valence.

Melanie Klein insisted on the extreme nature of the baby's emotions at the start of its extra-uterine existence, associated with love and hate relations directed at the (partial) object in what she called the "paranoid-schizoid position." Later, when the infant achieves the "depressive position," emotions become more nuanced, hate is tinged with guilt, love with ambivalence. Wilfred Bion gave the concept of emotion an essential role in his description of the intrapsychic world as a world of relations between internal or interiorized objects. For Bion the links between internal objects are emotional links, just as the links between the subject and its external objects are emotional in nature. He chose three types of emotional links: these correspond to love relations (L link = love), hate relations (H link = hatred), and knowledge relations (K link = knowledge). The first two, L and H, are emotional links; these are unstable and associated with splitting. The K link is the psychoanalytic link par excellence and has the advantage of stability. It does indeed involve an emotional link, in the sense that it corresponds to an emotion associated with uncertainty and the tension experienced in the face of the unknown in anticipation of meaning. Psychoanalytic therapy develops K links.

Bibliography

Bion, Wilfred. R. (1962). A theory of thinking. International Journal of Psycho-Analysis, XLIII, 4-5; in Second Thoughts, London: Heinemann, 1967.

Freud, Sigmund. (1895c [1894]). Obsessions and phobias: their psychical mechanism and their aetiology. SE, 3: 69-82.

Klein, Melanie. (1952). Quelques conclusions théoriques au sujet de la vieémotionnelle des bébés. In M. Klein, P. Heimann, S. Isaacs, and J. Riviere (Eds.), Developments in psychoanalysis (pp. 187-253). London: Hogarth Press.

Widlöcher, Daniel. (1992). De l'émotion primaireà l'affect différencié. In P. Mazet and S. Lebovici (Eds.)Émotions et Affects chez le bébé et ses partenaires (pp. 45-55). Paris: Eshel.

—DIDIER HOUZEL

World of the Mind: emotion
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Emotion is central to human life and intimately connected with consciousness. Historically, the link with consciousness has led to a relative neglect of emotion as a subject of systematic scientific enquiry in comparison with other fields, such as cognition. However, the last few decades have seen a significant increase in research on emotion, leading to important new discoveries of the brain mechanisms involved.

The concept of emotion can usefully be subdivided into two components: (i) the emotional state that can be measured through physiological changes such as autonomic response, and (ii) feelings, seen as the subjective experience of emotion. The latter is linked with qualia and the hard problem of consciousness, that is to say, what it is like subjectively to experience an emotional state. How the brain gives rise to consciousness remains an unsolved problem, but it is becoming increasingly clear which brain areas are involved in producing and representing emotional states.

Ancient Greek and later Western philosophers have always discussed emotion, although the emphasis has almost exclusively been on its cognitive evaluation. Cognition and emotion have been regarded as separate areas, and subsequently, for the larger part of the 20th century, most scientific research focused on cognition at the expense of emotion. Notwithstanding, important theoretical advances were made by pioneering individuals such as Charles Darwin (1872) who examined the evolution of emotional responses and facial expressions. Emotions allow an organism to make adaptive responses to salient stimuli in the environment, thus enhancing its chances of survival.

In the 1880s William James and Carl Lange independently proposed the idea that, rather than emotional experience being a response to a stimulus, it is the perception of the ensuing physiological bodily changes. The James–Lange theory suggests that we do not run from the bear because we are afraid but that we become afraid because we run.

Walter Cannon (1929) offered a detailed critique of the James–Lange theory showing that surgical disruption of the peripheral nervous system in dogs did not eliminate emotional responses as would have been predicted by the theory. Further investigations by Schacter and Singer (1962) suggested that bodily states must be accompanied by cognitive appraisal for an emotion to occur. However, this research did not fully resolve the basic question of the extent to which bodily states influence emotion. Recently, the James–Lange theory was resurrected by Antonio Damasio (1994) in the form of his somatic marker hypothesis, in which feedback from the peripheral nervous system controls the decision about the correct behavioural response rather than the emotional feelings as postulated in the James–Lange theory.

An alternative to such bodily theories of emotions has been proposed by Larry Weiskrantz (1968), Jeffrey Gray (1975), and Edmund Rolls (1999) who instead regard emotions as states elicited by rewards and punishments. Emotional stimuli are evaluated and mediated by specific brain structures which subsequently give rise to feelings and to changes in bodily response.

Although the theoretical debate over the nature of emotion has been very important, the development of experimental paradigms for the reliable testing of emotion in animals and humans has had just as much influence on the field of emotion research. Given that consciousness in animals remains controversial, the presence of feelings in animals is also a contentious issue. Animals do, however, show the characteristic behavioural, autonomic, and hormonal responses associated with emotional states when confronted with emotionally salient stimuli. Building on this insight, one of the most successful paradigms in emotion research has been fear conditioning where an auditory conditioned stimulus is paired with a foot shock. LeDoux (1996) and others have shown that for rats to learn the appropriate fear response depends crucially on a brain structure in the temporal lobes, the amygdala (Latin for 'almond'). Subsequently, much neuroscientific research has concentrated on elucidating the full role of the amygdala in fear, so that it has become popularly known as the fear centre in the brain. However, the amygdala is not a homogeneous brain structure but rather a collection of at least thirteen anatomically distinct nuclei. In addition, other research using appetitive conditioning has also implicated the amygdala, indicating that it can be activated by both positive and negative stimuli. It is therefore unlikely that the amygdala is concerned only with fear. Nevertheless, the fear-conditioning paradigm has been very successful in creating an adequate scientific model of emotion and firmly establishing the field of emotion research.

Paul Ekman's cross-cultural studies of human facial expression have been another influential paradigm which has strongly suggested an innate, biological basis for emotional experience. In the primate brain a dedicated neural circuitry for recognizing faces has been found in the fusiform gyrus, and in social animals such as humans and higher primates facial expressions act as highly significant social signals communicating the state of the individual to others. Ekman's research on universally recognized facial emotions and analyses of emotion terms in all the world's major languages have led to discussions on the existence and enumeration of the fundamental emotions that can act as basic building blocks of our entire emotional repetoire. Based on such research up to seven emotions have been proposed: anger, disgust, fear, sadness, joy, shame, and guilt. It remains an open question whether these emotions are really distinct or whether they are found on a continuum produced by shared brain mechanisms.

The question of what brain structures represent and mediate emotions can now be addressed more fully with neuroimaging, which allows a unique window on the living human brain. Experimental paradigms with emotionally salient stimuli have also allowed researchers to probe the nature of emotion. Negative emotions such as fear and disgust have already been the subject of much research, while positive emotions such as joy have been found much harder to induce experimentally. Consequently only a few studies to date have dealt with this important subject. Many neuroimaging studies build on the findings from animal studies using conditioning paradigms and primary reinforcers such as taste and smell, while other studies have begun to probe the brain mechanisms involved in more complex human activities such as gambling.

The findings from neuroimaging and anatomical evidence from lesions in humans and other higher primates have pointed to the role of several interconnected brain structures in emotion. An early attempt to synthesize the emotion literature was the theory proposed by James Papez (1937) where the cingulate cortex was seen as important for the experience of emotion, whereas emotional expression was governed by the hypothalamus, and these two structures were linked by the thalamus and the hippocampus.

This theory was further elaborated by Paul MacLean (1952) with his proposal for the evolution of the triune primate brain with three functionally distinct systems, of which the limbic system was the one mediating emotion. The term limbic lobe (Latin limbus, border) was proposed by Paul Broca in 1878 who coined the name for those structures surrounding the brain stem and corpus callosum on the medial walls of the brain. Broca did not specify a role for the limbic lobe in emotion, and indeed subsequent research has found that the concept of emotion mediated by a unifying limbic system is too simplistic.

These early pioneering theories were built on a paucity of experimental data, and with the recent flourishing of emotion research, and especially given the ever-increasing amount of human neuroimaging data, we are now in a much better position to evaluate which brain structures are crucial to emotion. The evidence points to the amygdala and the cingulate cortex as necessary for the proper emotional functioning of the primate brain. Furthermore, it has also become clear that in humans and other higher primates a very significant role is played by the orbitofrontal cortex (the part of the frontal lobes just above the eyeballs). Some of the first evidence for this came from the case of the young railway engineer Phineas Gage whose frontal lobes were completely penetrated by a metal rod in 1848. Miraculously, he survived but his personality and emotional processing were changed completely. Recent studies have shed further light on the functioning of the orbitofrontal cortex, and shown that the reward value of primary reinforcers such as taste, smell, and visual stimuli can be found there. Strong reciprocal connections are also found with the amygdala, and the scientific evidence suggests a similar role for the two brain areas, although the orbitofrontal cortex appears to be the more important for emotion in humans and higher primates.

Mood is the longer-lasting continuation of an emotional state and mood disorders such as depression and anxiety affect a large proportion of the population. Some statistics suggest that as much as a third of the population will experience a major depression during their lifetime. A very important goal in understanding the neural basis of emotion is to develop better treatments for these disorders. Neurotransmitters acting on the frontal lobes such as serotonin, dopamine, and other catecholamines have all been implicated in mood disorders. This has led to the development of antidepressants that have helped many sufferers, but the efficacy of these drugs has not yet been matched by a better understanding of the underlying brain mechanisms.

There are many interesting and important issues in emotion research which are not yet fully understood. It is clear that personality plays a significant role in shaping emotions, but we are a long way from understanding personality in neural terms. Studies in split-brain patients seems to suggest a hemispheric specialization of emotional processing, but the issue of lateralization is still much debated among researchers. It also clear that, although conscious appraisal of emotion is important for emotional expression, many emotional stimuli appear to be processed on a non-conscious level, only later to become available for conscious introspection (or, as in the case of blindsight, not at all). Emotion helps to facilitate learning and memory adaptively, and so there are strong links between emotion, learning, and memory, but the exact relationship between these are is yet fully understood.

The most difficult question facing emotion research is the question of where qualia are created in the brain. Science has not yet found the neural basis for our subjective experience of emotion, and some researchers have even raised doubts about whether this will ever happen. Nevertheless, it is clear that emotions are evolutionarily important for animals in preparing for appropriate actions. The evolution of conscious feelings could be adaptive, because they allow us to consciously appraise our emotions and actions, and subsequently to learn to manipulate these appropriately. Emotion may be one of evolution's most productive breakthroughs, constantly reminding us that we are still animals at heart, but endowed with the possibility of conscious appraisal and enhanced control of our subjective experience that comes with it.



Fig. 1. Key brain structures underlying emotion shown on a midsagittal view (top) and on a ventral view (bottom) of the human brain.


(Published 2004)

— Morten L. Kringelbach

    Bibliography
  • Cannon, W. B. (1927). 'The James–Lange theory of emotion'. American Journal of Psychology, 39.
  • Damasio, A. (1994). Descartes' Error.
  • Darwin, C. (1872). The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals.
  • Ekman, P., and Davidson, R. J. (eds.) (1994). The Nature of Emotion: Fundamental Questions.
  • Frijda, N. (1987). The Emotions.
  • Gray, J. (1975). Elements of a two-process theory of learning.
  • James, W. (1890). The Principles of Psychology.
  • Lange, C. G. (1887). Über Gemustsbewegungen.
  • LeDoux, J. E. (1996). The Emotional Brain.
  • MacLean, P. D. (1952). 'Some psychiatric implications of physiological on the frontotemporal portion of limbic system (visceral brain)'. Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology, 4.
  • Panksepp, J. (1999). Affective Neuroscience.
  • Papez, J. W. (1937). 'A proposed mechanism of emotion'. Arch. Neurol. Psychiat. 38.
  • Rolls, E. T. (1999). Brain and Emotion.
  • Schacter, S., and Singer, J. (1962). 'Cognitive, social and physiological determinants of emotional state'. Psych. Rev. 69.
  • Weiskrantz, L. (1968). 'Emotion'. In Weiskrantz, L. (ed.), Analysis of Behavioural Change.


Aroused state involving intense feeling, autonomic activation and related behavior. Animals have emotions insofar as they are motivated to behave by what they perceive and much of the reaction is learned rather than intuitive. The reactions are based on rewarding and adversive properties of stimuli from the external environment. The center for the control of emotional behavior is the limbic system of the brain.

Devil's Dictionary: emotion
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A cynical view of the world by Ambrose Bierce


n.

A prostrating disease caused by a determination of the heart to the head. It is sometimes accompanied by a copious discharge of hydrated chloride of sodium from the eyes.


Word Tutor: emotion
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pronunciation

IN BRIEF: Strong feeling. Also: A physical or mental reaction to a strong feeling.

pronunciation People think love is an emotion. Love is good sense. — Ken Kesey.

Quotes About: Emotions
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Quotes:

"The advantage of the emotions is that they lead us astray." - Oscar Wilde

"Emotions have taught mankind to reason." - Marquis De Vauvenargues

"The heart is forever inexperienced." - Henry David Thoreau

"Each of us makes his own weather, determines the color of the skies in the emotional universe which he inhabits." - Bishop Fulton J. Sheen

"Emotion is primarily about nothing and much of it remains about nothing to the end." - George Santayana

"The young man who has not wept is a savage, and the old man who will not laugh is a fool." - George Santayana

See more famous quotes about Emotions

Wikipedia: Emotion
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An emotion is a mental and physiological state associated with a wide variety of feelings, thoughts, and behavior. Emotions are subjective experiences, often associated with mood, temperament, personality, and disposition. The English word 'emotion' is derived from the French word émouvoir. This is based on the Latin emovere, where e- (variant of ex-) means 'out' and movere means 'move'.[1] The related term "motivation" is also derived from movere.

No definitive taxonomy of emotions exists, though numerous taxonomies have been proposed. Some categorizations include:

  • 'Cognitive' versus 'non-cognitive' emotions
  • Instinctual emotions (from the amygdala), versus cognitive emotions (from the prefrontal cortex).
  • Basic versus complex: where base emotions lead to more complex ones.
  • Categorization based on duration: Some emotions occur over a period of seconds (e.g. surprise) where others can last years (e.g. love).

A related distinction is between the emotion and the results of the emotion, principally behaviors and emotional expressions. People often behave in certain ways as a direct result of their emotional state, such as crying, fighting or fleeing. Yet again, if one can have the emotion without the corresponding behavior then we may consider the behavior not to be essential to the emotion. The James-Lange theory posits that emotional experience is largely due to the experience of bodily changes. The functionalist approach to emotions (e.g. Nico Frijda) holds that emotions have evolved for a particular function, such as to keep the subject safe.

Contents

Classification

Basic and complex categories, where some are modified in some way to form complex emotions (e.g. Paul Ekman). In one model, the complex emotions could arise from cultural conditioning or association combined with the basic emotions. Alternatively, analogous to the way primary colors combine, primary emotions could blend to form the full spectrum of human emotional experience. For example interpersonal anger and disgust could blend to form contempt.[citation needed]

Robert Plutchik proposed a three-dimensional "circumplex model" which describes the relations among emotions. This model is similar to a color wheel. The vertical dimension represents intensity, and the circle represents degrees of similarity among the emotions. He posited eight primary emotion dimensions arranged as four pairs of opposites. Some have also argued for the existence of meta-emotions which are emotions about emotions., "Meta-emotions".[citation needed]

Another important means of distinguishing emotions concerns their occurrence in time. Some emotions occur over a period of seconds (e.g. surprise) where others can last years (e.g. love). The latter could be regarded as a long term tendency to have an emotion regarding a certain object rather than an emotion proper (though this is disputed). A distinction is then made between emotion episodes and emotional dispositions. Dispositions are also comparable to character traits, where someone may be said to be generally disposed to experience certain emotions, though about different objects. For example an irritable person is generally disposed to feel irritation more easily or quickly than others do. Finally, some theorists (e.g. Klaus Scherer, 2005) place emotions within a more general category of 'affective states' where affective states can also include emotion-related phenomena such as pleasure and pain, motivational states (e.g. hunger or curiosity), moods, dispositions and traits.[citation needed]

Theories

Theories about emotions stretch back at least as far as the Ancient Greek Stoics, as well as Plato and Aristotle. We also see sophisticated theories in the works of philosophers such as René Descartes[2], Baruch Spinoza[3] and David Hume. Later theories of emotions tend to be informed by advances in empirical research. Often theories are not mutually exclusive and many researchers incorporate multiple perspectives in their work.

Somatic theories

Somatic theories of emotion claim that bodily responses rather than judgements are essential to emotions. The first modern version of such theories comes from William James in the 1880s. The theory lost favour in the 20th Century, but has regained popularity more recently due largely to theorists such as John Cacioppo, António Damásio, Joseph E. LeDoux and Robert Zajonc who are able to appeal to neurological evidence.

James-Lange theory

William James, in the article 'What is an Emotion?' (Mind, 9, 1884: 188-205), argued that emotional experience is largely due to the experience of bodily changes. The Danish psychologist Carl Lange also proposed a similar theory at around the same time, so this position is known as the James-Lange theory. This theory and its derivatives state that a changed situation leads to a changed bodily state. As James says 'the perception of bodily changes as they occur IS the emotion.' James further claims that 'we feel sad because we cry, angry because we strike, afraid because we tremble, and neither we cry, strike, nor tremble because we are sorry, angry, or fearful, as the case may be.'

This theory is supported by experiments in which by manipulating the bodily state, a desired emotion is induced.[4] Such experiments also have therapeutic implications (e.g. in laughter therapy, dance therapy). The James-Lange theory is often misunderstood because it seems counter-intuitive. Most people believe that emotions give rise to emotion-specific actions: i.e. "I'm crying because I'm sad," or "I ran away because I was scared." The James-Lange theory, conversely, asserts that first we react to a situation (running away and crying happen before the emotion), and then we interpret our actions into an emotional response. In this way, emotions serve to explain and organize our own actions to us.

Neurobiological theories

Based on discoveries made through neural mapping of the limbic system, the neurobiological explanation of human emotion is that emotion is a pleasant or unpleasant mental state organized in the limbic system of the mammalian brain. If distinguished from reactive responses of reptiles, emotions would then be mammalian elaborations of general vertebrate arousal patterns, in which neurochemicals (e.g., dopamine, noradrenaline, and serotonin) step-up or step-down the brain's activity level, as visible in body movements, gestures, and postures. In mammals, primates, and human beings, feelings are displayed as emotion cues.

For example, the human emotion of love is proposed to have evolved from paleocircuits of the mammalian brain (specifically, modules of the cingulate gyrus) which facilitate the care, feeding, and grooming of offspring. Paleocircuits are neural platforms for bodily expression configured millions of years before the advent of cortical circuits for speech. They consist of pre-configured pathways or networks of nerve cells in the forebrain, brain stem and spinal cord. They evolved prior to the earliest mammalian ancestors, as far back as the jawless fish, to control motor function.

Presumably, before the mammalian brain, life in the non-verbal world was automatic, preconscious, and predictable. The motor centers of reptiles react to sensory cues of vision, sound, touch, chemical, gravity, and motion with pre-set body movements and programmed postures. With the arrival of night-active mammals, circa 180 million years ago, smell replaced vision as the dominant sense, and a different way of responding arose from the olfactory sense, which is proposed to have developed into mammalian emotion and emotional memory. In the Jurassic Period, the mammalian brain invested heavily in olfaction to succeed at night as reptiles slept — one explanation for why olfactory lobes in mammalian brains are proportionally larger than in the reptiles. These odor pathways gradually formed the neural blueprint for what was later to become our limbic brain.

Emotions are thought to be related to activity in brain areas that direct our attention, motivate our behavior, and determine the significance of what is going on around us. Pioneering work by Broca (1878), Papez (1937), and MacLean (1952) suggested that emotion is related to a group of structures in the center of the brain called the limbic system, which includes the hypothalamus, cingulate cortex, hippocampi, and other structures. More recent research has shown that some of these limbic structures are not as directly related to emotion as others are, while some non-limbic structures have been found to be of greater emotional relevance.

Prefrontal Cortex

There is ample evidence that the left prefrontal cortex is activated by stimuli that cause positive approach.[5] If attractive stimuli can selectively activate a region of the brain, then logically the converse should hold, that selective activation of that region of the brain should cause a stimulus to be judged more positively. This was demonstrated for moderately attractive visual stimuli[6] and replicated and extended to include negative stimuli.[7]

Two neurobiological models of emotion in the prefrontal cortex made opposing predictions. The Valence Model predicted that anger, a negative emotion, would activate the right prefrontal cortex. The Direction Model predicted that anger, an approach emotion, would activate the left prefrontal cortex. The second model was supported.[8]

This still left open the question of whether the opposite of approach in the prefrontal cortex is better described as moving away (Direction Model), as unmoving but with strength and resistance (Movement Model), or as unmoving with passive yielding (Action Tendency Model). Support for the Action Tendency Model (passivity related to right prefrontal activity) comes from research on shyness[9] and research on behavioral inhibition.[10] Research that tested the competing hypotheses generated by all four models also supported the Action Tendency Model.[11][12]

Homeostatic Emotion

Another neurological approach, described by Bud Craig in 2003, distinguishes between two classes of emotion. "Classical emotions" include lust, anger and fear, and they are feelings evoked by environmental stimuli, which motivate us (to, in these examples, respectively, copulate/fight/flee). "Homeostatic emotions" are feelings evoked by internal body states, which modulate our behavior. Thirst, hunger, feeling hot or cold (core temperature), feeling sleep deprived, salt hunger and air hunger are all examples of homeostatic emotion; each is a signal from a body system saying "Things aren't right down here. Drink/eat/move into the shade/put on something warm/sleep/lick salty rocks/breathe." We begin to feel a homeostatic emotion when one of these systems drifts out of balance, and the feeling prompts us to do what is necessary to restore that system to balance. Pain is a homeostatic emotion telling us "Things aren't right here. Withdraw and protect."[13][14]

Cognitive theories

There are some theories on emotions arguing that cognitive activity in the form of judgements, evaluations, or thoughts is necessary in order for an emotion to occur. This, argued by Richard Lazarus, is necessary to capture the fact that emotions are about something or have intentionality. Such cognitive activity may be conscious or unconscious and may or may not take the form of conceptual processing. An influential theory here is that of Lazarus. A prominent philosophical exponent is Robert C. Solomon (e.g. The Passions, Emotions and the Meaning of Life, 1993). The theory proposed by Nico Frijda where appraisal leads to action tendencies is another example. It has also been suggested that emotions (affect heuristics, feelings and gut-feeling reactions) are often used as shortcuts to process information and influence behaviour.[15]

Perceptual theory

A recent hybrid of the somatic and cognitive theories of emotion is the perceptual theory. This theory is neo-Jamesian in arguing that bodily responses are central to emotions, yet it emphasises the meaningfulness of emotions or the idea that emotions are about something, as is recognised by cognitive theories. The novel claim of this theory is that conceptually based cognition is unnecessary for such meaning. Rather the bodily changes themselves perceive the meaningful content of the emotion because of being causally triggered by certain situations. In this respect, emotions are held to be analogous to faculties such as vision or touch, which provide information about the relation between the subject and the world in various ways. A sophisticated defense of this view is found in philosopher Jesse Prinz's book Gut Reactions and psychologist James Laird's book Feelings.

Affective Events Theory

This a communication-based theory developed by Howard M. Weiss and Russell Cropanzano (1996), that looks at the causes, structures, and consequences of emotional experience (especially in work contexts.) This theory suggests that emotions are influenced and caused by events which in turn influence attitudes and behaviors. This theoretical frame also emphasizes time in that human beings experience what they call emotion episodes - a “series of emotional states extended over time and organized around an underlying theme”. This theory has been utilized by numerous researchers to better understand emotion from a communicative lens, and was reviewed further by Howard M. Weiss and Daniel J. Beal in their article, Reflections on Affective Events Theory published in Research on Emotion in Organizations in 2005.

Cannon-Bard theory

In the Cannon-Bard theory, Walter Bradford Cannon argued against the dominance of the James-Lange theory regarding the physiological aspects of emotions in the second edition of Bodily Changes in Pain, Hunger, Fear and Rage. Where James argued that emotional behaviour often precedes or defines the emotion, Cannon and Bard argued that the emotion arises first and then stimulates typical behaviour.

Two-factor theory

Another cognitive theory is the Singer-Schachter theory. This is based on experiments purportedly showing that subjects can have different emotional reactions despite being placed into the same physiological state with an injection of adrenaline. Subjects were observed to express either anger or amusement depending on whether another person in the situation displayed that emotion. Hence the combination of the appraisal of the situation (cognitive) and the participants' reception of adrenaline or a placebo together determined the response. This experiment has been criticized in Jesse Prinz (2004) Gut Reactions.

Component process model

A recent version of the cognitive theory comes from which regards emotions more broadly as the synchronization of many different bodily and cognitive components. Emotions are identified with the overall process whereby low-level cognitive appraisals, in particular the processing of relevance, trigger bodily reactions, behaviors, feelings, and actions.

Disciplinary approaches

Many different disciplines have produced work on the emotions. Human sciences study the role of emotions in mental processes, disorders, and neural mechanisms. In psychiatry, emotions are examined as part of the discipline's study and treatment of mental disorders in humans. Psychology examines emotions from a scientific perspective by treating them as mental processes and behavior and they explore the underlying physiological and neurological processes. In neuroscience sub-fields such as affective neuroscience, scientists study the neural mechanisms of emotion by combining neuroscience with the psychological study of personality, emotion, and mood. In linguistics, the expression of emotion may change to the meaning of sounds. In education, the role of emotions in relation to learning are examined.

Social sciences often examine emotion for the role that it plays in human culture and social interactions. In sociology, emotions are examined for the role they play in human society, social patterns and interactions, and culture. In anthropology, the study of humanity, scholars use ethnography to undertake contextual analyses and cross-cultural comparisons of a range of human activities; some anthropology studies examine the role of emotions in human activities. In the field of communication sciences, critical organizational scholars have examined the role of emotions in organizations, from the perspectives of managers, employees, and even customers. A focus on emotions in organizations can be credited to Arlie Russell Hochschild's concept of emotional labor. The University of Queensland hosts EmoNet([1]), an email distribution list representing a network of academics that facilitates scholarly discussion of all matters relating to the study of emotion in organizational settings. The list was established in January, 1997 and has over 700 members from across the globe.

In economics, the social science that studies the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services, emotions are analyzed in some sub-fields of microeconomics, in order to assess the role of emotions on purchase decision-making and risk perception. In criminology, a social science approach to the study of crime, scholars often draw on behavioral sciences, sociology, and psychology; emotions are examined in criminology issues such as anomie theory and studies of "toughness", aggressive behavior, and hooliganism. In law, which underpins civil obedience, politics, economics and society, evidence about people's emotions is often raised in tort law claims for compensation and in criminal law prosecutions against alleged lawbreakers (as evidence of the defendant's state of mind during trials, sentencing, and parole hearings). In political science, emotions are examined in a number of sub-fields, such as the analysis of voter decision-making.

In philosophy, emotions are studied in sub-fields such as ethics, the philosophy of art (e.g., sensory-emotional values, and matters of taste and sentiment), and the philosophy of music. In history, scholars examine documents and other sources to interpret and analyze past activities; speculation on the emotional state of the authors of historical documents is one of the tools of interpretation. In literature and film-making, the expression of emotion is the cornerstone of genres such as drama, melodrama, and romance. In communication studies, scholars study the role that emotion plays in the dissemination of ideas and messages. Emotion is also studied in non-human animals in ethology, a branch of zoology which focuses on the scientific study of animal behavior. Ethology is a combination of laboratory and field science, with strong ties to ecology and evolution. Ethologists often study one type of behavior (e.g. aggression) in a number of unrelated animals.

Evolutionary biology

Perspectives on emotions from evolution theory were initiated in the late 19th century with Charles Darwin's book The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals.[16] Darwin's original thesis was that emotions evolved via natural selection and therefore have cross-culturally universal counterparts. Furthermore, animals undergo emotions comparable to our own (see emotion in animals). Evidence of universality in the human case has been provided by Paul Ekman's seminal research on facial expression. Other research in this area focuses on physical displays of emotion including body language of animals and humans (see affect display). The increased potential in neuroimaging has also allowed investigation into evolutionarily ancient parts of the brain. Important neurological advances were made from these perspectives in the 1990s by, for example, Joseph E. LeDoux and António Damásio.

American evolutionary biologist Robert Trivers argues that moral emotions are based on the principle of reciprocal altruism. The notion of group selection is of particular relevance. This theory posits the different emotions have different reciprocal effects. Sympathy prompts a person to offer the first favor, particularly to someone in need for whom the help would go the furthest. Anger protects a person against cheaters who accept a favor without reciprocating, by making him want to punish the ingrate or sever the relationship. Gratitude impels a beneficiary to reward those who helped him in the past. Finally, guilt prompts a cheater who is in danger of being found out, by making them want to repair the relationship by redressing the misdeed. As well, guilty feelings encourage a cheater who has been caught to advertise or promise that he will behave better in the future.

For more information see evolution of emotion.

Sociology

We try to regulate our emotions to fit in with the norms of the situation, based on many – sometimes conflicting – demands upon us which originate from various entities studied by sociology on a micro level – such as social roles and 'feeling rules' the everyday social interactions and situations are shaped by – and, on a macro level, by social institutions, discourses, ideologies etc. For example, (post-)modern marriage is, on one hand, based on the emotion of love and on the other hand the very emotion is to be worked on and regulated by it. The sociology of emotions also focuses on general attitude changes in a population. Emotional appeals are commonly found in advertising, health campaigns and political messages. Recent examples include no-smoking health campaigns and political campaign advertising emphasizing the fear of terrorism.

Psychotherapy

Depending on the particular school's general emphasis either on cognitive component of emotion, physical energy discharging, or on symbolic movement and facial expression components of emotion, different schools of psychotherapy approach human emotions differently. While, for example, the school of Re-evaluation Counseling propose that distressing emotions are to be relieved by "discharging" them - hence crying, laughing, sweating, shaking, and trembling.[17] Other more cognitively oriented schools approach them via their cognitive components, such as rational emotive behavior therapy. Yet other approach emotions via symbolic movement and facial expression components (like in contemporary gestalt therapy[18]).

Computer science

In the 2000s, in research in computer science, engineering, psychology and neuroscience has been aimed at developing devices that recognize human affect display and model emotions [19]. In computer science, affective computing is a branch of the study and development of artificial intelligence that deals with the design of systems and devices that can recognize, interpret, and process human emotions. It is an interdisciplinary field spanning computer sciences, psychology, and cognitive science.[20] While the origins of the field may be traced as far back as to early philosophical enquiries into emotion,[21] the more modern branch of computer science originated with Rosalind Picard's 1995 paper[22] on affective computing.[23][24] Detecting emotional information begins with passive sensors which capture data about the user's physical state or behavior without interpreting the input. The data gathered is analogous to the cues humans use to perceive emotions in others. Another area within affective computing is the design of computational devices proposed to exhibit either innate emotional capabilities or that are capable of convincingly simulating emotions. Emotional speech processing recognizes the user's emotional state by analyzing speech patterns. The detection and processing of facial expression or body gestures is achieved through detectors and sensors.

Notable theorists

In the late nineteenth century, the most influential theorists were William James (1842 – 1910) and Carl Lange (1834 - 1900). James was an American psychologist and philosopher who wrote about educational psychology, psychology of religious experience/mysticism, and the philosophy of pragmatism. Lange was a Danish physician and psychologist. Working independently, they developed the James-Lange theory, a hypothesis on the origin and nature of emotions. The theory states that within human beings, as a response to experiences in the world, the autonomic nervous system creates physiological events such as muscular tension, a rise in heart rate, perspiration, and dryness of the mouth. Emotions, then, are feelings which come about as a result of these physiological changes, rather than being their cause.

Some of the most influential theorists on emotion from the twentieth century have passed away in the last decade. They include Magda B. Arnold (1903-2002), an American psychologist who developed the appraisal theory of emotions; Richard Lazarus (1922-2002), an American psychologist who specialized in emotion and stress, especially in relation to cognition; Herbert Simon (1916-2001), who included emotions into decision making and artificial intelligence; Robert Plutchik (1928-2006), an American psychologist who developed a psychoevolutionary theory of emotion; Robert Zajonc (1923-2008) a Polish-American social psychologist who specializes in social and cognitive processes such as social facilitation. In addition, an American philosopher, Robert C. Solomon (1942 – 2007), contributed to the theories on the philosophy of emotions with books such as What Is An Emotion?: Classic and Contemporary Readings (Oxford, 2003).

Influential theorists who are still active include psychologists, neurologists, and philosophers including:

  • Lisa Feldman Barrett - Social philosopher and psychologist specializing in affective science and human emotion.
  • John Cacioppo - from the University of Chicago, founding father with Gary Berntson of social neuroscience.
  • António Damásio (1944- ) - Portuguese behavioral neurologist and neuroscientist who works in the US
  • Richard Davidson American psychologist and neuroscientist who pioneered the discipline of affective neuroscience.
  • Paul Ekman (1934- ) - Psychologist specializing in study of emotions and their relation to facial expressions
  • Barbara Fredrickson - Social psychologist who specializes in emotions and positive psychology.
  • Nico Frijda (1927- ) - Dutch psychologist who specializes in human emotions, especially facial expressions
  • Peter Goldie - British philosopher who specializes in ethics, aesthetics, emotion, mood and character
  • Joseph E. LeDoux (1949- ) - American neuroscientist who studies the biological underpinnings of memory and emotion, especially the mechanisms of fear
  • Jesse Prinz - American philosopher who specializes in emotion, moral psychology, aesthetics and consciousness
  • Klaus Scherer (1943- ) - Swiss psychologist and director of the Swiss Center for Affective Sciences in Geneva; he specializes in the psychology of emotion
  • Ronald de Sousa (1940- ) - English-Canadian philosopher who specializes in the philosophy of emotions, philosophy of mind and philosophy of biology.
  • Arlie Russell Hochschild (1940- ) - American sociologist whose central contribution was in forging a link between the subcutaneous flow of emotion in social life and the larger trends set loose by modern capitalism within organizations.

See also

References

  1. ^ Emotional Competency discussion of emotion
  2. ^ See Philip Fisher (1999) Wonder, The Rainbow and the Aesthetics of Rare Experiences for an introduction
  3. ^ See for instance Antonio Damasio (2005) Looking for Spinoza.
  4. ^ Laird, James, Feelings: the Perception of Self, Oxford University Press
  5. ^ Kringelbach, M. L., O’Doherty, J. O., Rolls, E. T., & Andrews, C. (2003). Activation of the human orbitofrontal cortex to a liquid food stimulus is correlated with its subjective pleasantness. Cerebral Cortex, 13, 1064-1071.
  6. ^ Drake, R. A. (1987). Effects of gaze manipulation on aesthetic judgments: Hemisphere priming of affect. Acta Psychologica, 65, 91-99.
  7. ^ Merckelbach, H., & van Oppen, P. (1989). Effects of gaze manipulation on subjective evaluation of neutral and phobia-relevant stimuli: A comment on Drake's (1987) 'Effects of gaze manipulation on aesthetic judgments: Hemisphere priming of affect.' Acta Psychologica, 70, 147-151.
  8. ^ Harmon-Jones, E., Vaughn-Scott, K., Mohr, S., Sigelman, J., & Harmon-Jones, C. (2004). The effect of manipulated sympathy and anger on left and right frontal cortical activity. Emotion, 4, 95-101.
  9. ^ Schmidt, L. A. (1999). Frontal brain electrical activity in shyness and sociability. Psychological Science, 10, 316-320.
  10. ^ Garavan, H., Ross, T. J., & Stein, E. A. (1999). Right hemispheric dominance of inhibitory control: An event-related functional MRI study. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 96, 8301-8306.
  11. ^ Drake, R. A., & Myers, L. R. (2006). Visual attention, emotion, and action tendency: Feeling active or passive. Cognition and Emotion, 20, 608-622.
  12. ^ Wacker, J., Chavanon, M.-L., Leue, A., & Stemmler, G. (2008). Is running away right? The behavioral activation–behavioral inhibition model of anterior asymmetry. Emotion, 8, 232-249.
  13. ^ Craig, A. D. (Bud) (2008). "Interoception and emotion: A neuroanatomical perspective". in Lewis, M.; Haviland-Jones, J. M.; Feldman Barrett, L.. Handbook of Emotion (3 ed.). New York: The Guildford Press. pp. 272-288. ISBN 978-1-59385-650-2. 
  14. ^ Craig, A. D. (Bud) (2003). "Interoception: The sense of the physiological condition of the body". Current Opinion in Neurobiology 13: 500-505. doi:10.1016/S0959-4388(03)00090-4. PMID 12965300. http://www.jsmf.org/meetings/2007/oct-nov/CONB%20Craig%202003.pdf. 
  15. ^ see the Heuristic-Systematic Model, or HSM, (Chaiken, Liberman, & Eagly, 1989) under attitude change. Also see the index entry for "Emotion" in "Beyond Rationality: The Search for Wisdom in a Troubled Time" by Kenneth R. Hammond and in "Fooled by Randomness: The Hidden Role of Chance in Life and in the Markets" by Nassim Nicholas Taleb.
  16. ^ Darwin, Charles (1872). The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals. Note: This book was originally published in 1872, but has been reprinted many times thereafter by different publishers
  17. ^ Counseling recovery processes - RC website
  18. ^ On Emotion - an article from Manchester Gestalt Centre website
  19. ^ Fellous, Armony & LeDoux, 2002
  20. ^ Tao, Jianhua; Tieniu Tan (2005). "LNCS volume = 3784". Affective Computing and Intelligent Interaction. Springer. pp. 981–995. doi:10.1007/11573548. 
  21. ^ James, William (1884). "What is Emotion". Mind 9: 188–205.  Cited by Tao and Tan.
  22. ^ "Affective Computing" MIT Technical Report #321 (Abstract), 1995
  23. ^ Kleine-Cosack, Christian (October 2006). "Recognition and Simulation of Emotions" (PDF). http://ls12-www.cs.tu-dortmund.de//~fink/lectures/SS06/human-robot-interaction/Emotion-RecognitionAndSimulation.pdf. Retrieved May 13, 2008. "The introduction of emotion to computer science was done by Pickard (sic) who created the field of affective computing." 
  24. ^ Diamond, David (December 2003). "The Love Machine; Building computers that care.". Wired. http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/11.12/love.html. Retrieved May 13, 2008. "Rosalind Picard, a genial MIT professor, is the field's godmother; her 1997 book, Affective Computing, triggered an explosion of interest in the emotional side of computers and their users." 

Further reading

  • Cornelius, R. (1996). The science of emotion. New Jersey: Prentice Hall.
  • Freitas-Magalhães, A. (2007).The Psychology of Emotions: The Allure of Human Face. Oporto: University Fernando Pessoa Press.
  • Ekman, P. (1999). "Basic Emotions". In: T. Dalgleish and M. Power (Eds.). Handbook of Cognition and Emotion. John Wiley & Sons Ltd, Sussex, UK:.
  • Frijda, N. H. (1986). The Emotions. Maison des Sciences de l'Homme and Cambridge University Press. [2]
  • Hochschild, A. R. (1983). The managed heart: Commercialization of human feelings. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • LeDoux, J. E. (1986). The neurobiology of emotion. Chap. 15 in J E. LeDoux & W. Hirst (Eds.) Mind and Brain: dialogues in cognitive neuroscience. New York: Cambridge.
  • Plutchik, R. (1980). A general psychoevolutionary theory of emotion. In R. Plutchik & H. Kellerman (Eds.), Emotion: Theory, research, and experience: Vol. 1. Theories of emotion (pp. 3–33). New York: Academic.
  • Scherer, K. (2005). What are emotions and how can they be measured? Social Science Information Vol. 44, No. 4: 695-729.
  • Solomon, R. (1993). The Passions: Emotions and the Meaning of Life. Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing.

External links


Misspellings: emotion
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Common misspelling(s) of emotion

  • emition

Translations: Emotion
Top

Dansk (Danish)
n. - følelse, sindsbevægelse

Nederlands (Dutch)
emotie, gevoel, opwinding, ontroering

Français (French)
n. - émotion, sentiment

Deutsch (German)
n. - Emotion, Bewegtheit, Gefühl

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - συγκίνηση, έξαψη, (συν)αίσθημα, πάθος, αναταραχή

Italiano (Italian)
emozione

Português (Portuguese)
n. - emoção (f)

Русский (Russian)
эмоция, чувство, волнение, возбуждение

Español (Spanish)
n. - emoción, enternecimiento, movimiento del ánimo

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - sinnesrörelse, stark känsla

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
情绪, 强烈的情感, 激动

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 情緒, 強烈的情感, 激動

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 감격, 감정

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 感激, 感動, 感情, 情動

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) انفعال, احساس, , عاطفه‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮רגש, הרגשה, ריגוש‬


 
 

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