Categorical versus dimensional models of affect a seminar on the theories of Panksepp and Russell
One of the most important theoretical and empirical issues in the scholarly study of emotion is whether there is a correct list of "basic" types of affect or whether all affective states are better modeled as a combination of locations on shared underlying dimensions. Many thinkers have wr...
Otros Autores: | , |
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Formato: | Libro electrónico |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam ; Philadelphia :
John Benjamins Pub. Co
2012.
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Edición: | 1st ed |
Colección: | Consciousness & emotion book series ;
v. 7. |
Materias: | |
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull: | https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009798251406719 |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Categorical versus Dimensional Models of Affect; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; 1. Introduction; 2. An intellectual biography of Jaak Panksepp; 3. An intellectual biography of James Russell; 4. What is at stake in this scientific debate about affect?; 5. The plan of the book and chapter summaries; References; 2. In defense of multiple Core Affects; 2. How does affect relate to prototypical emotional episodes?; 3. What kind of affect might be had by other mammals and/or human infants?; 4. How can we infer affect from observation of behavior?
- 6. Is affect always conscious?7. What is the relationship between affect and cognition?; 9. What roles do the biological sciences and psychological sciences have in studying affect?; 11. Considering the diversity of theoretical viewpoints in the scientific study of affective and emotional pphenomena; References; 1. Psychological construction; 4. What kind of affect might be had by other mammals and/or human infants?; 5. How can we infer affect from observation of behavior?; 7. Is affect always conscious?; 8. What is the relationship between affect and cognition
- 10. What roles do the biological sciences and psychological sciences have in studying affect12. Considering the diversity of theoretical viewpoints in the scientific study; References; 1. The affective neuroscience of raw emotional feelings; 2. The dimensionality of affective experience; 5. Concluding challenges and reflections; References; 5. Preliminary comments on Panksepp; 6. Discrete emotions: From folk psychology to causal mechanisms; 1. Introduction; 2. Panksepp on primary, secondary and tertiary affects; 3. Russell on core affect, affective quality and meta-experience
- 4. Are discrete emotions causal mechanisms?6. Why do emotion components co-occur?; 7. A possible reconciliation?; 8. Conclusion; References; 7. Nothing in mammalian psychology makes sense except in light of primary-process capacitiies; 1. Ancestral voices in the mammalian mind; 2. How we know that we do not know ourselves; 3. In the shadows of doubt; 4. Conclusion; References; References; 9. Affect as appraisal; 1. Introduction; 2. A perspective on affect and emotion; 3. Functionalism; 4. Affect, emotion and cognition; 5. Social influences; 6. Conclusion; References
- 10. What should theories of emotion be about?1. Some thoughts on reading Panksepp; 2. Some thoughts on reading Russell; 3. In defense of meta (tertiary) emotional experiences; 4. Emotional causality and realism; 5. Concluding observations; References; 11. Valence, reductionism, and the ineffable; 1. Some questions about valence; 2. Reductionism; 3. Coherence and construction; 4. Levels of analysis; References; 1. Introduction; References; 13. Comparison of affect program theories, appraisal theories, psychological construction theories; 1. Definition of emotion; 2. Emotion causation
- 3. Empirical research