000 03352nam a2200169Ia 4500
999 _c150621
_d150621
020 _a0521316006
040 _cCUS
082 _a152.4
_bFRI/E
100 _aFrijda, Nico H.
_9704
245 4 _aThe emotions/
_cNico H. Frijda.
260 _aLondon:
_bCambridge university,
_c1986.
300 _aix, 544 p. ;
_c24 cm.
440 _aStudies in emotion and social interaction.
_9705
505 _a1 Introduction 1. 1 Emotional phenomena 1. 2 Overview of the present approach PART I ANALYSIS 2 Emotional behavior 2. 1 Expressive behavior and its explanation 2. 2 Relational interpretation of expressions 2. 3 Variants of relational behavior 2. 4 Behavior intensity, activation, and inhibition 2. 5 Smiling, laughing, and weeping 2. 6 Expression, emotion, communication, and mood 2. 7 Emotional expression as unlearned response 2. 8 Action tendencies and activation modes 2. 9 Emotional behavior generally 2.10 Emotions as intentional structures 2.11 The provenance of emotional behavior 2.12 Behavioral consequences of emotion 3 Physiology of emotion 3. 1 Introduction 3 2 Autonomic variable^ related to emotions 3 3 Temporal characteristics of autonomic responses 3 4 The nature and function of autonomic responses 3. 5 Hormonal changes 3. 6 Electronical changes 3. 7 Muscle tension and tremor 3. 8 Physiological response patterns 3. 9 Arousal, emotion, and physiological change 3.10 Consequences of physiological response 4 Emotional experience 4. 1 Theoretical viewpoints 4. 2 The investigation of emotional experience 4. 3 The nature of "experience": reflexive and irreflexive consciousness 4. 4 Emotional experience as experience of the situation 4. 5 Emotional experience as experience of autonomic arousal 4. 6 Emotional experience as awareness of action and action tendency 4. 7 Hedonic quality 4. 8 The significance of emotion 4. 9 Intensity of emotional experience 4.10 Emotional experience: its structure and varieties 4.11 Definition of emotion and kinds of emotion PART II ANTECEDENTS 5 Emotional stimuli, or situational antecedents 5. 1 Theoretical viewpoints 5. 2 "Stimuli," events, and cognitive processes 5 3 Unlearned emotional stimuli 5. 4 The elicitation of emotion 5. 5 The description of emotional stimuli 5. 6 Factors affecting emotional intensity 5. 7 Acquisition of emotion 5^ 8 Loss and persistence of emotions 5. 9 The stimulus reception process 6 Concerns and other dispositional antecedents 6. 1 Dispositional sources of emotion 6. 2 Concerns 6. 3 Discussion of some source concerns 6. 4 The structure of concerns, pleasure and pain, and the problem of circularity 5 5 The function of emotions and feelings ^ 6 Other dispositional antecedents 7 Neurophysiological conditions 7. 1 Brain structures involved in emotion 7. 2 Elicited behavior 7. 3 Activating mechanisms 7. 4 Evaluation functions 7. 5 Inhibitor)' and regulatory functions 7. 6 "Feeling" and mood 7. 7 Hemispheric differences 8 Regulation 8. 1 Regulation phenomena 8. 2 Instigation of regulation 8. 3 Major regulatory mechanisms 8. 4 Input regulation and psychiatric coping 8. 5 Regulation of emotional impulse and response 8. 6 External regulation PART III SYNTHESIS 9 Theory of emotion 9. 1 The emotion process 9. 2 Emotional experience 9. 3 Psychological theory of emotion 9. 4 The concept of "emotion"
650 _aEmotions
_9706
942 _cWB16
_016