Emotion science : cognitive and neuroscientific approaches to understanding human emotions / Elaine Fox.
2008
BF531 .F69 2008 (Mapit)
Available at General Collection
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Details
Title
Emotion science : cognitive and neuroscientific approaches to understanding human emotions / Elaine Fox.
Author
ISBN
9780230005181 (pbk.)
0230005187 (pbk.)
0230005187 (pbk.)
Published
Basingstoke ; New York : Palgrave Macmillan, 2008.
Language
English
Description
xx, 456 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Call Number
BF531 .F69 2008
Dewey Decimal Classification
152.4
Summary
(Publisher-supplied data) ELAINE FOX is Professor of Psychology at the University of Essex. She lectured at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand and University College Dublin before taking up her current role in 1994. She was Associate Editor of Cognition and Emotion from 1996 until 2001 and is carrying out research at the Medical Research Council's Cognition and Brain Science's Unit in Cambridge.
(Publisher-supplied data) Emotions and affective processes are fundamentally important to our lives. They regulate our relationships and social interactions, they help us communicate with one another, and almost certainly help us maintain good health and prevent the onset and development of disease. The study of emotion has a long history in philosophy and psychology. However, until recently, emotion research has been a marginal activity in psychological science. In the behaviorist era, which dominated much of the twentieth century, emotion was often deemed unworthy of serious research because the field lacked objective ways to measure emotions and their associated feelings without resorting to introspection by subjects, which is, by definition, non-behavioral. In addition, since Plato, it is easy to discern a quiet bias in the sciences against emotions or "passions," which were often posited as inferior to the higher gifts of Reason and unworthy of serious research. This view, however, has changed radically in the past few years. With the development of sophisticated imaging tools like fMRI, researchers have uncovered the centrality of emotion to our thinking and reasoning and remembering, and evidence has demonstrated that it may be misleading to posit two separate phenomena altogether, i.e., "cognition" and "emotion." These traditional categories have been shown to be highly interdependent processes that interact with each other in a dynamic way. Our memories of the past; our decisions and plans for the future; what we attend to on a moment-to-moment basis; what we think about as we daydream: all of those cognitive operations are coloured by emotions, just as emotions themselves are influenced by cognitive processes. Therefore, in order to gain a more complete understanding of the richness of our mental life we need to more fully understand the role of emotions and how these processes interact with the traditionally defined "cognitive" processes. The Science of Emotion is the first textbook to integrate psychology and neuroscientific evidence to develop a modern understanding of emotion and the nature of the links between processes that have traditionally been considered "cognitive" and those that have traditionally been considered "emotional." While these two constructs have often been treated as separate, residing in two separate areas of the brain-the neo-cortex and the limbic system, respectively, The Science of Emotion uses the latest research to show how the two phenomena are intertwined and interdependent both at neural and psychological levels. The book contains at least one focus box per chapter that will either take an interesting question (e.g., Do we run because we are afraid, or afraid because we run?) or a more empirically-based question from everyday life (e.g., Are we more likely to remember emotional events?). There is also a further material website with links and more detailed descriptions of key experiments.
(Publisher-supplied data) PART 1: BACKGROUND * Emotion: Psychological and Neuroscientific Approaches * The Case for and against Basic Emotions * PART 2: THE INFLUENCE OF EMOTIONS AND MOOD ON COGNITION * The Primacy of Affect * The Effects of Basic Emotions on Cognition * Complex Emotions, Moods, and Feelings * Individual Differences in Affective Style * PART 3: THE INFLUENCE OF COGNITION ON EMOTION AND MOOD * Cognitive Theories of Emotion * The Role of Attentional Biases in Emotion and Mood States * The Role of Memory Biases in Emotion and Mood States * The Role of Interpretation and Judgement Biases in Emotions and Mood States * PART 4: CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS * Cognitive Theories of Emotional Disorders * Implications of Affective Science for Clinical Practice * PART 5: THEORETICAL OVERVIEW * Multi-level Theories of Emotion * Can Psychological and Neuroscientific Approaches be Integrated?
(Publisher-supplied data) Emotions and affective processes are fundamentally important to our lives. They regulate our relationships and social interactions, they help us communicate with one another, and almost certainly help us maintain good health and prevent the onset and development of disease. The study of emotion has a long history in philosophy and psychology. However, until recently, emotion research has been a marginal activity in psychological science. In the behaviorist era, which dominated much of the twentieth century, emotion was often deemed unworthy of serious research because the field lacked objective ways to measure emotions and their associated feelings without resorting to introspection by subjects, which is, by definition, non-behavioral. In addition, since Plato, it is easy to discern a quiet bias in the sciences against emotions or "passions," which were often posited as inferior to the higher gifts of Reason and unworthy of serious research. This view, however, has changed radically in the past few years. With the development of sophisticated imaging tools like fMRI, researchers have uncovered the centrality of emotion to our thinking and reasoning and remembering, and evidence has demonstrated that it may be misleading to posit two separate phenomena altogether, i.e., "cognition" and "emotion." These traditional categories have been shown to be highly interdependent processes that interact with each other in a dynamic way. Our memories of the past; our decisions and plans for the future; what we attend to on a moment-to-moment basis; what we think about as we daydream: all of those cognitive operations are coloured by emotions, just as emotions themselves are influenced by cognitive processes. Therefore, in order to gain a more complete understanding of the richness of our mental life we need to more fully understand the role of emotions and how these processes interact with the traditionally defined "cognitive" processes. The Science of Emotion is the first textbook to integrate psychology and neuroscientific evidence to develop a modern understanding of emotion and the nature of the links between processes that have traditionally been considered "cognitive" and those that have traditionally been considered "emotional." While these two constructs have often been treated as separate, residing in two separate areas of the brain-the neo-cortex and the limbic system, respectively, The Science of Emotion uses the latest research to show how the two phenomena are intertwined and interdependent both at neural and psychological levels. The book contains at least one focus box per chapter that will either take an interesting question (e.g., Do we run because we are afraid, or afraid because we run?) or a more empirically-based question from everyday life (e.g., Are we more likely to remember emotional events?). There is also a further material website with links and more detailed descriptions of key experiments.
(Publisher-supplied data) PART 1: BACKGROUND * Emotion: Psychological and Neuroscientific Approaches * The Case for and against Basic Emotions * PART 2: THE INFLUENCE OF EMOTIONS AND MOOD ON COGNITION * The Primacy of Affect * The Effects of Basic Emotions on Cognition * Complex Emotions, Moods, and Feelings * Individual Differences in Affective Style * PART 3: THE INFLUENCE OF COGNITION ON EMOTION AND MOOD * Cognitive Theories of Emotion * The Role of Attentional Biases in Emotion and Mood States * The Role of Memory Biases in Emotion and Mood States * The Role of Interpretation and Judgement Biases in Emotions and Mood States * PART 4: CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS * Cognitive Theories of Emotional Disorders * Implications of Affective Science for Clinical Practice * PART 5: THEORETICAL OVERVIEW * Multi-level Theories of Emotion * Can Psychological and Neuroscientific Approaches be Integrated?
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
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Table of Contents
Introduction to emotion science
The nature and measurement of emotions, moods and feelings
Individual differences in emotional reactivity and regulation : temperament, personality and affective style
Categorical approaches to the structure of affect
Dimensional approaches to the structure of affect
Affect-cognition relations : perception, attention and judgment
Affect-cognition relations : memory
Individual differences in emotional processing
Determinants of emotional disorders
Determinants of resilience and well-being
Theoretical overview.
The nature and measurement of emotions, moods and feelings
Individual differences in emotional reactivity and regulation : temperament, personality and affective style
Categorical approaches to the structure of affect
Dimensional approaches to the structure of affect
Affect-cognition relations : perception, attention and judgment
Affect-cognition relations : memory
Individual differences in emotional processing
Determinants of emotional disorders
Determinants of resilience and well-being
Theoretical overview.