The Nature of Emotion
Fundamental Questions
Herausgeber: Fox, Andrew S; Davidson, Richard J; Shackman, Alexander J; Lapate, Regina C
The Nature of Emotion
Fundamental Questions
Herausgeber: Fox, Andrew S; Davidson, Richard J; Shackman, Alexander J; Lapate, Regina C
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The Editors of this unique volume asked some of the world's leading emotion researchers to address 14 fundamental questions about the nature and origins of emotion. Each chapter addresses one of these questions, with often divergent answers from the more than 100 experts represented here. At the end of each chapter, the Editors highlight key areas of agreement and disagreement. In the final chapter, they outline the most important challenges facing the field and themost fruitful avenues for future research. Not a textbook offering a single viewpoint, The Nature of Emotion reveals the central…mehr
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- Produktdetails
- Series in Affective Science
- Verlag: Oxford University Press Inc
- 2 Revised edition
- Seitenzahl: 632
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. September 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 251mm x 177mm x 40mm
- Gewicht: 1296g
- ISBN-13: 9780190612573
- ISBN-10: 0190612576
- Artikelnr.: 52406342
- Series in Affective Science
- Verlag: Oxford University Press Inc
- 2 Revised edition
- Seitenzahl: 632
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. September 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 251mm x 177mm x 40mm
- Gewicht: 1296g
- ISBN-13: 9780190612573
- ISBN-10: 0190612576
- Artikelnr.: 52406342
* Contributors
* Introduction
* Preface to Paul Ekman's Essay
* Richard J. Davidson
* How emotions might work
* Paul Ekman
* Question 1. What is an emotion?
* Emotions and feelings: William James and the present
* Antonio Damasio and Hanna Damasio
* Emotions are functional states that cause feelings and behavior
* Ralph Adolphs
* What is emotion? A natural science perspective
* Peter J. Lang and Margaret M. Bradley
* Affect is essential to emotion
* Kent C. Berridge
* Emotions: Causes and consequences
* Gerald L. Clore
* What are emotional states, and what are their functions?
* Edmund T. Rolls
* Active inference and emotion
* Karl J. Friston, Mateus Joffily, Lisa Feldman Barrett and Anil K.
Seth
* Emotions are constructed with interoception and concepts within a
predicting brain
* Lisa Feldman Barrett
* Afterword
* Regina C. Lapate and Alexander J. Shackman
* Question 2. How are emotions, mood and temperament related?
* Distinguishing affective constructs: Structure, trait- vs.
state-ness, and responses to affect
* Kristin Naragon-Gainey
* Inhibited temperament and intrinsic versus extrinsic influences on
fear circuits
* Jennifer Urbano Blackford and David H. Zald
* Distinctions among moods and temperaments
* Jerome Kagan
* Distinctions between temperament and emotion: Examining reactivity,
regulation, and social understanding
* Lindsay C. Bowman and Nathan A. Fox
* Afterword
* Alexander J. Shackman, Regina C. Lapate and Andrew S. Fox
* Question 3. What are the dimensions and bases for lasting individual
differences in emotion?
* Personality as lasting individual differences in emotions
* Rebecca L. Shiner
* The bases for preservation of emotional biases
* Jerome Kagan
* The psychological and neurobiological bases of dispositional
negativity
* Alexander J. Shackman, Melissa D. Stockbridge, Edward P. Lemay, Jr.
and Andrew S. Fox
* Reactivity, recovery, regulation: The three R's of emotional
responding
* Richard J. Davidson
* Afterword
* Alexander J. Shackman and Andrew S. Fox
* Question 4. What is the added value of studying the brain for
understanding emotion?
* Studying the brain is necessary for understanding emotion
* Tom Johnstone
* Brain and emotion research: Contributions of patient and activation
studies
* Robert W. Levenson
* Understanding emotion by unraveling complex structure-function
mappings
* Luiz Pessoa
* Brain studies can advance psychological understanding
* Kent C. Berridge
* Afterword
* Alexander J. Shackman and Regina C. Lapate
* Question 5. How are emotions organized in the brain?
* Discrete and dimensional contributions to emotion arise from multiple
brain circuits
* Ralph Adolphs
* Brain limbic systems as flexible generators of emotion
* Kent C. Berridge
* At primal levels, via vast subcortical brain networks that mediate
instinctual emotional reactions that help program higher-order
emotional-cognitive abilities in higher regions of the brain and
mind.
* Jaak Panksepp
* Brain architecture and principles of the organization of emotion in
the brain
* Luiz Pessoa
* Variation and degeneracy in the brain basis of emotion.
* Lisa Feldman Barrett
* How are emotions organized in the brain?
* Tor D. Wager, Anjali Krishnan and Emma Hitchcock
* The brain is organized to emote
* Andrew S. Fox
* Neural circuit mechanisms for switching emotional tracks: From
positive to negative and back again
* Kay M. Tye
* Afterword
* Alexander J. Shackman and Andrew S. Fox
* Question 6. When and in what ways are emotions adaptive and
maladaptive?
* The ambiguous issue of adaptive emotions
* Jerome Kagan
* Maladaptive emotions are inseparable from inaccurate appraisals
* Phoebe C. Ellsworth
* Emotions aren't maladaptive
* Aaron S. Heller
* Cultural neuroscience of emotion
* Joan Y. Chiao
* Positive emotions broaden and build: Consideration for how and when
pleasant subjective experiences are adaptive and maladaptive
* Barbara L. Fredrickson
* The social nature of emotions: Context matters
* Amy Lehrner and Rachel Yehuda
* Afterword
* Andrew S. Fox and Regina C. Lapate
* Question 7. How are emotions regulated by context and cognition?
* Emotion as an evolutionary adaptive pattern: The roles of context and
cognition
* D. Caroline Blanchard and Brandon L. Pearson
* Individual differences in fear conditioning and extinction paradigms:
Insights for emotion regulation
* Marie-France Marin and Mohammed R. Milad
* The role of context and cognition in the placebo effect
* Lauren Y. Atlas
* Emotional Intensity: It is the thought that counts
* Gerald L. Clore and David A. Reinhard
* Emotion regulation as a change of goals and priorities
* Carien M. van Reekum and Tom Johnstone
* Searching for implicit emotion regulation
* Matthew D. Lieberman
* Fighting fire with fire: Endogenous emotion generation as a means of
emotion regulation
* Haakon G. Engen and Tania Singer
* Afterword
* Alexander J. Shackman and Regina C. Lapate
* Question 8. How do emotion and cognition interact?
* The interplay of emotion and cognition
* Hadas Okon-Singer, Daniel M. Stout, Melissa D. Stockbridge, Matthias
Gamer, Andrew S. Fox and Alexander J. Shackman
* The impact of affect depends on its object
* Gerald L. Clore
* Thoughts on cognition-emotion interactions and their role in the
diagnosis and treatment of psychopathology
* Keren Maoz and Yair Bar-Haim
* Beyond cognition and emotion: Dispensing with a cherished
psychological narrative
* Alexandra Touroutoglou and Lisa Feldman Barrett
* Can we advance our understanding of emotional behavior by
reconceptualizing it as involving valuation?
* Roshan Cools, Hanneke den Ouden, Verena Ly and Quentin Huys
* Beyond the threat bias: Reciprocal links between emotion and
cognition
* Nick Berggren and Nazanin Derakshan
* The cognitive-emotional brain
* Luiz Pessoa
* Emotional vs. rational systems, and decisions between them
* Edmund T. Rolls
* Afterword
* Alexander J. Shackman and Regina C. Lapate
* Question 9. How are emotions embodied in the social world?
* Connections between emotions and the social world: Numerous and
complex
* Nancy Eisenberg and Maciel M. Hernández
* Effects of emotion on interpersonal behavior: A motivational
perspective
* Edward P. Lemay, Jr.
* Emotion in the social world
* Carolyn Parkinson
* The affective nature of social interactions
* Dominic S. Fareri and Mauricio R. Delgado
* On the significance of implicit emotional communication
* Andrew S. Fox
* Deconstructing social emotions: Empathy and compassion and their
relation to prosocial behavior
* Haakon G. Engen and Tania Singer
* Afterword
* Andrew S. Fox and Alexander J. Shackman
* Question 10. How and why are emotions communicated?
* Form of facial expression communication originates in sensory
function
* Daniel H. Lee and Adam K. Anderson
* Expression of emotion: New principles for future inquiry
* Dacher Keltner, Daniel T. Cordaro, Jessica Tracy, and Disa Sauter
* The (more or less accurate) communication of emotions serves social
problem solving
* Ursula Hess
* Making sense of the senses in emotion communication
* Wen Li, Lucas R. Novak, and Yuqi You
* Movement and manipulation: the how and why of emotion communication
* Lasana T. Harris
* Concepts are key to the "communication" of emotion
* Maria Gendron and Lisa Feldman Barrett
* The web of emotion understanding in human infants
* Betty M. Repacholi and Andrew N. Meltzoff
* The dynamic-interactive model approach to the perception of facial
emotion
* Jonathan B. Freeman
* Afterword
* Regina C. Lapate and Andrew S. Fox
* Question 11. How are emotions physically embodied?
* How and why emotions are embodied
* Adrienne Wood, Jared Martin and Paula Niedenthal
* Emotion in body and brain: Context-dependent action and reaction
* Margaret M. Bradley and Peter J. Lang
* The importance of the mind for understanding how emotions are
embodied
* Naomi I. Eisenberger
* How are emotions physically embodied?
* Rosalind W. Picard
* Pain as an embodied emotion
* Tim V. Salomons
* How are emotions organized and physically embodied?
* Bruce S. McEwen
* The complex tapestry of emotion: immune and microbial contributions
* Melissa A. Rosenkranz
* Afterword
* Andrew S. Fox and Alexander J. Shackman
* Question 12. What is the role of conscious awareness in emotion?
* Emotions are more than their subjective feelings
* Kent C. Berridge
* Reactive emotional processing in the absence of conscious awareness
* Joshua M. Carlson
* What is the role of unconscious emotions and of conscious awareness
in emotion?
* Beatrice de Gelder and Marco Tamietto
* Self-regulating our emotional states when we are conscious of them
and when we are not
* Leanne Williams
* Regulatory benefits of conscious awareness: Insights from the emotion
misattribution paradigm and a role for lateral prefrontal cortex
* Regina C. Lapate
* Afterword
* Regina C. Lapate and Andrew S. Fox
* Question 13. How are emotions integrated into choice?
* How can affect influence choice?
* Brian Knutson and Mirre Stallen
* Emotions through the lens of economic theory
* Agnieszka Tymula and Paul Glimcher
* Emotions as computational signals of goal error
* Luke J. Chang and Eshin Jolly
* Affect is the foundation of value
* Catherine Hartley and Peter Sokol-Hessner
* Emotion, value, and choice
* Jolie Wormwood and Lisa Feldman Barrett
* Emotions can bias decision-making processes by promoting specific
behavioral tendencies
* Jan B. Engelmann and Todd A. Hare
* Emotions are important for advantageous decision-making: A
neuropsychological perspective
* Justin Reber and Daniel Tranel
* From emotion to motion: Making choices based on current states and
biological needs
* Elisabeth A. Murray
* Afterword
* Andrew S. Fox and Regina C. Lapate
* Question 14. What develops in emotional development?
* The recognition of emotion during the first years of life
* Julia Cataldo and Charles A. Nelson
* Everything develops during emotional development
* Hill H. Goldsmith
* Stability and change in emotion-relevant personality traits in
childhood and adolescence
* Rebecca L. Shiner
* Normative trajectories and sources of psychopathology risk in
adolescence
* Leah H. Somerville and Katie A. McLaughlin
* What happens in emotional development? Adolescent emotionality
* Eveline A. Crone and Jennifer H. Pfeifer
* Goals change with age and benefit emotional experience
* Candice Hogan, Tamara Sims and Laura L. Carstensen
* Ideal ends in emotional development
* Carol D. Ryff
* Afterword
* Regina C. Lapate and Alexander J. Shackman
* Epilogue-The nature of emotion: A research agenda for the 21st
century
* Andrew S. Fox, Regina C. Lapate, Richard J. Davidson and Alexander J.
Shackman
* References
* Index
* Contributors
* Introduction
* Preface to Paul Ekman's Essay
* Richard J. Davidson
* How emotions might work
* Paul Ekman
* Question 1. What is an emotion?
* Emotions and feelings: William James and the present
* Antonio Damasio and Hanna Damasio
* Emotions are functional states that cause feelings and behavior
* Ralph Adolphs
* What is emotion? A natural science perspective
* Peter J. Lang and Margaret M. Bradley
* Affect is essential to emotion
* Kent C. Berridge
* Emotions: Causes and consequences
* Gerald L. Clore
* What are emotional states, and what are their functions?
* Edmund T. Rolls
* Active inference and emotion
* Karl J. Friston, Mateus Joffily, Lisa Feldman Barrett and Anil K.
Seth
* Emotions are constructed with interoception and concepts within a
predicting brain
* Lisa Feldman Barrett
* Afterword
* Regina C. Lapate and Alexander J. Shackman
* Question 2. How are emotions, mood and temperament related?
* Distinguishing affective constructs: Structure, trait- vs.
state-ness, and responses to affect
* Kristin Naragon-Gainey
* Inhibited temperament and intrinsic versus extrinsic influences on
fear circuits
* Jennifer Urbano Blackford and David H. Zald
* Distinctions among moods and temperaments
* Jerome Kagan
* Distinctions between temperament and emotion: Examining reactivity,
regulation, and social understanding
* Lindsay C. Bowman and Nathan A. Fox
* Afterword
* Alexander J. Shackman, Regina C. Lapate and Andrew S. Fox
* Question 3. What are the dimensions and bases for lasting individual
differences in emotion?
* Personality as lasting individual differences in emotions
* Rebecca L. Shiner
* The bases for preservation of emotional biases
* Jerome Kagan
* The psychological and neurobiological bases of dispositional
negativity
* Alexander J. Shackman, Melissa D. Stockbridge, Edward P. Lemay, Jr.
and Andrew S. Fox
* Reactivity, recovery, regulation: The three R's of emotional
responding
* Richard J. Davidson
* Afterword
* Alexander J. Shackman and Andrew S. Fox
* Question 4. What is the added value of studying the brain for
understanding emotion?
* Studying the brain is necessary for understanding emotion
* Tom Johnstone
* Brain and emotion research: Contributions of patient and activation
studies
* Robert W. Levenson
* Understanding emotion by unraveling complex structure-function
mappings
* Luiz Pessoa
* Brain studies can advance psychological understanding
* Kent C. Berridge
* Afterword
* Alexander J. Shackman and Regina C. Lapate
* Question 5. How are emotions organized in the brain?
* Discrete and dimensional contributions to emotion arise from multiple
brain circuits
* Ralph Adolphs
* Brain limbic systems as flexible generators of emotion
* Kent C. Berridge
* At primal levels, via vast subcortical brain networks that mediate
instinctual emotional reactions that help program higher-order
emotional-cognitive abilities in higher regions of the brain and
mind.
* Jaak Panksepp
* Brain architecture and principles of the organization of emotion in
the brain
* Luiz Pessoa
* Variation and degeneracy in the brain basis of emotion.
* Lisa Feldman Barrett
* How are emotions organized in the brain?
* Tor D. Wager, Anjali Krishnan and Emma Hitchcock
* The brain is organized to emote
* Andrew S. Fox
* Neural circuit mechanisms for switching emotional tracks: From
positive to negative and back again
* Kay M. Tye
* Afterword
* Alexander J. Shackman and Andrew S. Fox
* Question 6. When and in what ways are emotions adaptive and
maladaptive?
* The ambiguous issue of adaptive emotions
* Jerome Kagan
* Maladaptive emotions are inseparable from inaccurate appraisals
* Phoebe C. Ellsworth
* Emotions aren't maladaptive
* Aaron S. Heller
* Cultural neuroscience of emotion
* Joan Y. Chiao
* Positive emotions broaden and build: Consideration for how and when
pleasant subjective experiences are adaptive and maladaptive
* Barbara L. Fredrickson
* The social nature of emotions: Context matters
* Amy Lehrner and Rachel Yehuda
* Afterword
* Andrew S. Fox and Regina C. Lapate
* Question 7. How are emotions regulated by context and cognition?
* Emotion as an evolutionary adaptive pattern: The roles of context and
cognition
* D. Caroline Blanchard and Brandon L. Pearson
* Individual differences in fear conditioning and extinction paradigms:
Insights for emotion regulation
* Marie-France Marin and Mohammed R. Milad
* The role of context and cognition in the placebo effect
* Lauren Y. Atlas
* Emotional Intensity: It is the thought that counts
* Gerald L. Clore and David A. Reinhard
* Emotion regulation as a change of goals and priorities
* Carien M. van Reekum and Tom Johnstone
* Searching for implicit emotion regulation
* Matthew D. Lieberman
* Fighting fire with fire: Endogenous emotion generation as a means of
emotion regulation
* Haakon G. Engen and Tania Singer
* Afterword
* Alexander J. Shackman and Regina C. Lapate
* Question 8. How do emotion and cognition interact?
* The interplay of emotion and cognition
* Hadas Okon-Singer, Daniel M. Stout, Melissa D. Stockbridge, Matthias
Gamer, Andrew S. Fox and Alexander J. Shackman
* The impact of affect depends on its object
* Gerald L. Clore
* Thoughts on cognition-emotion interactions and their role in the
diagnosis and treatment of psychopathology
* Keren Maoz and Yair Bar-Haim
* Beyond cognition and emotion: Dispensing with a cherished
psychological narrative
* Alexandra Touroutoglou and Lisa Feldman Barrett
* Can we advance our understanding of emotional behavior by
reconceptualizing it as involving valuation?
* Roshan Cools, Hanneke den Ouden, Verena Ly and Quentin Huys
* Beyond the threat bias: Reciprocal links between emotion and
cognition
* Nick Berggren and Nazanin Derakshan
* The cognitive-emotional brain
* Luiz Pessoa
* Emotional vs. rational systems, and decisions between them
* Edmund T. Rolls
* Afterword
* Alexander J. Shackman and Regina C. Lapate
* Question 9. How are emotions embodied in the social world?
* Connections between emotions and the social world: Numerous and
complex
* Nancy Eisenberg and Maciel M. Hernández
* Effects of emotion on interpersonal behavior: A motivational
perspective
* Edward P. Lemay, Jr.
* Emotion in the social world
* Carolyn Parkinson
* The affective nature of social interactions
* Dominic S. Fareri and Mauricio R. Delgado
* On the significance of implicit emotional communication
* Andrew S. Fox
* Deconstructing social emotions: Empathy and compassion and their
relation to prosocial behavior
* Haakon G. Engen and Tania Singer
* Afterword
* Andrew S. Fox and Alexander J. Shackman
* Question 10. How and why are emotions communicated?
* Form of facial expression communication originates in sensory
function
* Daniel H. Lee and Adam K. Anderson
* Expression of emotion: New principles for future inquiry
* Dacher Keltner, Daniel T. Cordaro, Jessica Tracy, and Disa Sauter
* The (more or less accurate) communication of emotions serves social
problem solving
* Ursula Hess
* Making sense of the senses in emotion communication
* Wen Li, Lucas R. Novak, and Yuqi You
* Movement and manipulation: the how and why of emotion communication
* Lasana T. Harris
* Concepts are key to the "communication" of emotion
* Maria Gendron and Lisa Feldman Barrett
* The web of emotion understanding in human infants
* Betty M. Repacholi and Andrew N. Meltzoff
* The dynamic-interactive model approach to the perception of facial
emotion
* Jonathan B. Freeman
* Afterword
* Regina C. Lapate and Andrew S. Fox
* Question 11. How are emotions physically embodied?
* How and why emotions are embodied
* Adrienne Wood, Jared Martin and Paula Niedenthal
* Emotion in body and brain: Context-dependent action and reaction
* Margaret M. Bradley and Peter J. Lang
* The importance of the mind for understanding how emotions are
embodied
* Naomi I. Eisenberger
* How are emotions physically embodied?
* Rosalind W. Picard
* Pain as an embodied emotion
* Tim V. Salomons
* How are emotions organized and physically embodied?
* Bruce S. McEwen
* The complex tapestry of emotion: immune and microbial contributions
* Melissa A. Rosenkranz
* Afterword
* Andrew S. Fox and Alexander J. Shackman
* Question 12. What is the role of conscious awareness in emotion?
* Emotions are more than their subjective feelings
* Kent C. Berridge
* Reactive emotional processing in the absence of conscious awareness
* Joshua M. Carlson
* What is the role of unconscious emotions and of conscious awareness
in emotion?
* Beatrice de Gelder and Marco Tamietto
* Self-regulating our emotional states when we are conscious of them
and when we are not
* Leanne Williams
* Regulatory benefits of conscious awareness: Insights from the emotion
misattribution paradigm and a role for lateral prefrontal cortex
* Regina C. Lapate
* Afterword
* Regina C. Lapate and Andrew S. Fox
* Question 13. How are emotions integrated into choice?
* How can affect influence choice?
* Brian Knutson and Mirre Stallen
* Emotions through the lens of economic theory
* Agnieszka Tymula and Paul Glimcher
* Emotions as computational signals of goal error
* Luke J. Chang and Eshin Jolly
* Affect is the foundation of value
* Catherine Hartley and Peter Sokol-Hessner
* Emotion, value, and choice
* Jolie Wormwood and Lisa Feldman Barrett
* Emotions can bias decision-making processes by promoting specific
behavioral tendencies
* Jan B. Engelmann and Todd A. Hare
* Emotions are important for advantageous decision-making: A
neuropsychological perspective
* Justin Reber and Daniel Tranel
* From emotion to motion: Making choices based on current states and
biological needs
* Elisabeth A. Murray
* Afterword
* Andrew S. Fox and Regina C. Lapate
* Question 14. What develops in emotional development?
* The recognition of emotion during the first years of life
* Julia Cataldo and Charles A. Nelson
* Everything develops during emotional development
* Hill H. Goldsmith
* Stability and change in emotion-relevant personality traits in
childhood and adolescence
* Rebecca L. Shiner
* Normative trajectories and sources of psychopathology risk in
adolescence
* Leah H. Somerville and Katie A. McLaughlin
* What happens in emotional development? Adolescent emotionality
* Eveline A. Crone and Jennifer H. Pfeifer
* Goals change with age and benefit emotional experience
* Candice Hogan, Tamara Sims and Laura L. Carstensen
* Ideal ends in emotional development
* Carol D. Ryff
* Afterword
* Regina C. Lapate and Alexander J. Shackman
* Epilogue-The nature of emotion: A research agenda for the 21st
century
* Andrew S. Fox, Regina C. Lapate, Richard J. Davidson and Alexander J.
Shackman
* References
* Index