1,721,185 research outputs found
Barrett_Supplemental_Material – Supplemental material for Emotional Expressions Reconsidered: Challenges to Inferring Emotion From Human Facial Movements
Supplemental material, Barrett_Supplemental_Material for Emotional Expressions Reconsidered: Challenges to Inferring Emotion From Human Facial Movements by Lisa Feldman Barrett, Ralph Adolphs, Stacy Marsella, Aleix M. Martinez and Seth D. Pollak in Psychological Science in the Public Interest</p
Supplemental material table and figures -Supplemental material for Line-drawn Scenes Provide Sufficient Information for Discrimination of Threat and Mere Negativity
Supplemental material, Supplemental material table and figures for Line-drawn Scenes Provide Sufficient Information for Discrimination of Threat and Mere Negativity by Jasmine Boshyan, Lisa Feldman Barrett, Nicole Betz, Reginald B. Adams, Jr., Kestutis Kveraga in i-Perception</p
sj-docx-1-pps-10.1177_17456916231178555 – Supplemental material for What We Can Learn About Emotion by Talking With the Hadza
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-pps-10.1177_17456916231178555 for What We Can Learn About Emotion by Talking With the Hadza by Katie Hoemann, Maria Gendron, Alyssa N. Crittenden, Shani Msafiri Mangola, Endeko S. Endeko, Èvelyne Dussault, Lisa Feldman Barrett and Batja Mesquita in Perspectives on Psychological Science</p
What you know about the brain is wrong: A review of Barrett’s Seven and a half lessons about the brain
This is a book review of Seven and a half lessons about the brain by Lisa Feldman Barrett
Interview with Lisa Feldman Barrett on Emotion review, edited by Lisa Feldman Barrett and James Russell
Emotion Review is a new fully peer reviewed scholarly journal published by SAGE Publications in association with the International Society for Research on Emotion (ISRE) from 2009. Its unique aim will be to publish a combination of theoretical, conceptual, and review papers - often with commentaries - to enhance debate about critical issues in emotion theory and research. Emotion Review will publish work across a wide interdisciplinary field of research that traverses many disciplines. In this respect, the journal will be open to publishing work in anthropology, biology, computer science, economics, history, humanities, linguistics, neuroscience, philosophy, physiology, political science, psychiatry, psychology, sociology, and in other areas where emotion research is active.Title supplied by cataloger
Emotion Fingerprints or Emotion Populations? A Meta-Analytic Investigation of Autonomic Features of Emotion Categories
Classical theories of emotion hypothesize that certain emotion categories each have a
biological essence in the form of an autonomic "fingerprint" that is specific to that
category and distinct from the others; significant variation within a category is
presumed to be epiphenomenal. The theory of constructed emotion hypothesizes that
an emotion category is a population of context-specific, highly variable instances that
need not share an autonomic fingerprint; instead variation within a category is
assumed to be a meaningful part of the nature of emotion. We present a meta-analysis
of over 200 published studies of emotion-related autonomic change to directly compare
these competing hypotheses. Both multilevel meta-analytic techniques and multivariate
pattern classifications better support the theory of constructed emotion. We observed
significant variation both within and across emotion categories, and no autonomic
fingerprints were in evidence. Experimental moderators that are epiphenomenal to
emotion, such as the type of induction (e.g., films vs. imagery), did not explain a large
portion of the observed variability. These findings, when considered in the broader
empirical literature, are more consistent with population thinking and other principles
from evolutionary biology used by the theory of constructed emotion to understand the
nature of emotion.sponsorship: The Karen S. Quigley and Lisa Feldman Barrett share senior authorship. Special thanks to Justin Kopec, Lauren Sears, Sam Lyons, and Victoria Spring for their help with the literature search and for database(s) organization. Thanks also to Maria Gendron for her helpful comments on a draft of the article. Preparation of this article was supported by a U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) Director's Pioneer Award (DP1OD003312), a U.S. National Institute on Aging grant (R01AG030311), a U.S. National Science Foundation grant (BCS-1052790), and contracts from the U.S. Army Research Institute for the Behavioral and Social Sciences (Contract W5J9CQ-12-C-0049, W5J9CQ-11-C-0046) to Lisa Feldman Barrett. Army Research Institute (W911NF-16-1-0191), Individual differences in emotional experience and cognitive performance (3,180,229) to Lisa Feldman Barrett. National Institute for Mental Health (T32 MH019391) to Erika H. Siegel. The views, opinions, and findings contained in this article are those of the authors and should not be construed as an official position, policy, or decision of the U.S. National Institutes of Health or Department of the Army unless so designated by other documents. (U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH)|DP1OD003312, U.S. National Institute on Aging|R01AG030311, U.S. National Science Foundation|BCS-1052790, U.S. Army Research Institute for the Behavioral and Social Sciences|W5J9CQ-12-C-0049, U.S. Army Research Institute for the Behavioral and Social Sciences|W5J9CQ-11-C-0046, National Institute for Mental Health|T32 MH019391)status: Publishe
Emotions in Historical Documents
La conduite des filles de joie à la Salpêtrière : le passage près de la porte Saint-Bernard Étienne Jeaurat (1699 - 1789) "Jurors do not and cannot detect remorse or any other emotion in anybody, ever. Neither can I and neither can you. And that's because emotions are not what we think they are." This straightforward statement introduces the TED talk You Aren't at the Mercy of your Emotions--Your Brain Creates Them, by Lisa Feldman Barrett, neuroscientist, psychologist, and professor at North..
Symptom and signal, expression and mutual adjustment in preverbal social regulation
Der Text rekonstruiert Kontinuitäten und Brüche in der von Karl Bühler in seiner Krise der Psychologie (1927) und seiner Ausdruckstheorie (1933) hinterlassenen präkybernetischen Axiomatik der Interaktion anhand der gegenwärtigen psychologischen Debatten über Emotionsund Affektausdruck. Die These lautet: Im Kern operieren moderne Psychologen wie der Tierverhaltensforscher Frans de Waal, die konstruktivistische Neuropsychologin Lisa Feldman Barrett und der kulturhistorische Psychologe Michael Tomasello beinahe 100 Jahre später noch weitgehend auf der von Bühler umrissenen Grundlage.In this paper, I reconstruct the continuities and differences between Karl Bühler’s pre-cybernetic model of non-verbal interaction – as sketched in his Krise der Psychologie (1927) and his Ausdruckstheorie (1933) – and present-day debates on the expression of emotion and affect. I offer the thesis that today, almost 100 years later, the field of psychology is still caught up in very similar quandaries. This is shown by comparing Bühler’s work to the theories and models of a present-day ethologist (Frans de Waal), a neuroscientist and psychologist (Lisa Feldman Barrett), and a culturalist developmental psychologist (Michael Tomasello)
The Secret Life of the Brain: How Emotions Are Built
The science of emotions is in full swing, and this paradigm shift has far-reaching implications for all of us. The psychologist and neuroscientist Lisa Feldman Barrett, whose theory of emotions is driving a deeper understanding of the mind and brain, reverses the widespread belief that emotions are housed in different parts of the brain and are universally expressed and recognized. Quite the contrary, it has shown that emotions are built in the moment, through central systems that interact throughout the brain through a lifetime of learning.La ciencia de las emociones está en plena revolución y este cambio de paradigma tiene implicaciones de gran alcance para todos nosotros. La psicóloga y neurocientífica Lisa Feldman Barrett, cuya teoría de las emociones está impulsando una comprensión más profunda de la mente y el cerebro, revierte la creencia generalizada de que las emociones se alojan en diferentes partes del cerebro y se expresan y reconocen universalmente. Muy al contrario, ha demostrado que las emociones se construye en el momento, mediante sistemas centrales que interactúan en todo el cerebro gracias a toda una vida de aprendizaje
The Secret Life of the Brain: How Emotions Are Built
The science of emotions is in full swing, and this paradigm shift has far-reaching implications for all of us. The psychologist and neuroscientist Lisa Feldman Barrett, whose theory of emotions is driving a deeper understanding of the mind and brain, reverses the widespread belief that emotions are housed in different parts of the brain and are universally expressed and recognized. Quite the contrary, it has shown that emotions are built in the moment, through central systems that interact throughout the brain through a lifetime of learning.La ciencia de las emociones está en plena revolución y este cambio de paradigma tiene implicaciones de gran alcance para todos nosotros. La psicóloga y neurocientífica Lisa Feldman Barrett, cuya teoría de las emociones está impulsando una comprensión más profunda de la mente y el cerebro, revierte la creencia generalizada de que las emociones se alojan en diferentes partes del cerebro y se expresan y reconocen universalmente. Muy al contrario, ha demostrado que las emociones se construye en el momento, mediante sistemas centrales que interactúan en todo el cerebro gracias a toda una vida de aprendizaje
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