According to the Conceptual Act Theory of Emotion, the situated conceptualization used to construe a situation determines the emotion experienced. A neuroimaging experiment tested two core hypotheses of this theory: (1) different situated conceptualizations produce different forms of the same emotion in different situations, (2) the composition of a situated conceptualization emerges from shared multimodal circuitry distributed across the brain that produces emotional states generally. To test these hypotheses, the situation in which participants experienced an emotion was manipulated. On each trial, participants immersed themselves in a physical danger or social evaluation situation and then experienced fear or anger. According to Hypothes...
Research on emotion attribution has tended to focus on the perception of overt expressions of at mos...
SummaryResearch on emotion attribution has tended to focus on the perception of overt expressions of...
Although the emotions of other people can often be perceived from overt reactions (e.g., facial or v...
According to the Conceptual Act Theory of Emotion, the situated conceptualization used to construe a...
From the perspective of constructivist theories, emotion results from learning assemblies of relevan...
Emotion concepts are important. They help us to understand, experience and predict human behaviour. ...
Psychological construction approaches to emotion suggest that emotional experience is situated and d...
Theories of embodied cognition hold that higher cognitive processes operate on perceptual symbols an...
The dual nature of emotions as both bodily and cognitive phenomena has posed quite a conundrum for t...
In each passing moment, our brains engage with multimodal stimuli that are both internal and externa...
Constructionist approaches to emotion have existed since the time of William James, and are united i...
This chapter develops two themes about the conceptual system: modal simulations underlie conceptual ...
This project begins with a theoretical and methodological critique of contemporary empirically drive...
Emotions are specific psychological states brought about by neurophysiological changes associated wi...
ABSTRACT—This study examined the hypothesis that emo-tion is a psychological event constructed from ...
Research on emotion attribution has tended to focus on the perception of overt expressions of at mos...
SummaryResearch on emotion attribution has tended to focus on the perception of overt expressions of...
Although the emotions of other people can often be perceived from overt reactions (e.g., facial or v...
According to the Conceptual Act Theory of Emotion, the situated conceptualization used to construe a...
From the perspective of constructivist theories, emotion results from learning assemblies of relevan...
Emotion concepts are important. They help us to understand, experience and predict human behaviour. ...
Psychological construction approaches to emotion suggest that emotional experience is situated and d...
Theories of embodied cognition hold that higher cognitive processes operate on perceptual symbols an...
The dual nature of emotions as both bodily and cognitive phenomena has posed quite a conundrum for t...
In each passing moment, our brains engage with multimodal stimuli that are both internal and externa...
Constructionist approaches to emotion have existed since the time of William James, and are united i...
This chapter develops two themes about the conceptual system: modal simulations underlie conceptual ...
This project begins with a theoretical and methodological critique of contemporary empirically drive...
Emotions are specific psychological states brought about by neurophysiological changes associated wi...
ABSTRACT—This study examined the hypothesis that emo-tion is a psychological event constructed from ...
Research on emotion attribution has tended to focus on the perception of overt expressions of at mos...
SummaryResearch on emotion attribution has tended to focus on the perception of overt expressions of...
Although the emotions of other people can often be perceived from overt reactions (e.g., facial or v...