首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
We investigated age differences in the experience and expression of emotion in 64 younger and 62 older adults. By manipulating emotion-regulation instructions, we investigated the effects of age on the control of both the inner experience and the outward expression of emotion. We predicted that there would be age improvements in regulating the inner experience of emotion. Indeed, our results indicated that older adults were more effective than young adults in following instructions to reduce the early experience of negative emotion. There were no age differences in following another emotion-regulation strategy involving the suppression of emotional display. In contrast to the well-documented difficulties in cognitive regulation of other studies, these data suggest that the ability to control experience and expression of emotions operates effectively in older adulthood.  相似文献   

2.
Background:Emotion is a ubiquitous aspect of humanity that governs behavior in a number of ways and is linked inextricably with health. Pausing to evaluate one’s emotional state in the face of decisions and reflecting on past patterns of emotion have been shown to improve behaviors. Further, social expression of emotion has been shown to directly improve health outcomes. While the virtual reality research community does not ignore emotion on the whole, there does exist a need to explore what roles emotional awareness and emotion sharing can play in this domain.Methods:A mobile-phone-based social emotion recording and sharing system, Aurora, was developed to provide individuals with a means to pause and evaluate their emotional state, reflect on past emotions, share emotions with others, and participate in socially supportive activities with peers. A study was conducted with 65 subjects to evaluate Aurora as a tool to encourage emotional reflection and awareness as well as social sharing of emotion.Results:Users of Aurora reported an increased comfort in socially expressing emotion and were encouraged to share emotions, even with strangers. Subjects also reported liking reflecting on their emotional state and found it valuable. Subjects’ behavior also suggested that the system encouraged individuals to reach out to one another in acts of social support.Conclusions:The Aurora system offers a tool for encouraging emotional awareness, emotion sharing, and socially supportive behavior. Such a tool could be impactful in numerous health settings where emotion is considered to be an important indicator of or influence on outcome, such as for weight loss, alcohol cessation, or cancer sufferers.  相似文献   

3.
Emotions are central to contemporary theories of health, and a growingbody of psychological research has shown emotion and emotion regulatorystyles to be predictive of health outcomes. Yet despite these clear links andthe fact that patterns of emotion and expression are partially a product ofculture, there is a meager literature on the emotional characteristics ofdifferent ethnic groups. Even where ethnicity has been investigated inemotions research, it has typically been operationalized in such a way thatwithin-group differences are obscured with most individuals assigned tobroad ethnic categories, such as non-Hispanic White, or Black. In thepresent study we draw on data from a multi-ethnic sample of 755community-dwelling older adults to parse a picture of the emotionalcharacteristics of three of the largest and most culturally distinct ethnicgroups in the Northeastern United States: African Americans, West Indians (Jamaicans), andEastern Slavs (Russians and Ukrainians) from the former Soviet Republic,as well as a comparison group of US-born European Americans. Aspredicted, there were striking differences in nine of 10 trait emotions aswell as in levels of emotion expressed during conflict. The findings arediscussed in terms of emotion socialization and implications for predictionand intervention in psychosocial models of emotions, emotion regulation,and health in older ethnic populations.  相似文献   

4.
A number of evolutionary theories assume that music and language have a common origin as an emotional protolanguage that remains evident in overlapping functions and shared neural circuitry. The most basic prediction of this hypothesis is that sensitivity to emotion in speech prosody derives from the capacity to process music. We examined sensitivity to emotion in speech prosody in a sample of individuals with congenital amusia, a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by deficits in processing acoustic and structural attributes of music. Twelve individuals with congenital amusia and 12 matched control participants judged the emotional expressions of 96 spoken phrases. Phrases were semantically neutral but prosodic cues (tone of voice) communicated each of six emotional states: happy, tender, afraid, irritated, sad, and no emotion. Congenitally amusic individuals were significantly worse than matched controls at decoding emotional prosody, with decoding rates for some emotions up to 20% lower than that of matched controls. They also reported difficulty understanding emotional prosody in their daily lives, suggesting some awareness of this deficit. The findings support speculations that music and language share mechanisms that trigger emotional responses to acoustic attributes, as predicted by theories that propose a common evolutionary link between these domains.  相似文献   

5.
Patients with eating disorders have been shown to experience the emotional components of alexithymia—difficulties in identifying and describing emotions. In keeping with cognitive theories, which stress the role of schema‐level beliefs in understanding emotions, this study examined the core beliefs that are associated with this difficulty in women with eating disorders. Seventy eating‐disordered women completed standardised measures of core beliefs and alexithymia. There were no differences in alexithymia between diagnostic groups, so the women were treated as a single, transdiagnostic group. Multiple regression analyses showed specific patterns of association between the core beliefs and the emotional elements of alexithymia. Difficulties in identifying emotions were associated with entitlement beliefs, while difficulties in describing emotions were associated with both abandonment and emotional inhibition beliefs. These findings suggest that it may be necessary to work with core beliefs in order to reduce levels of alexithymia, prior to addressing the emotions that drive and maintain pathological eating behaviours. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and Eating Disorders Association.  相似文献   

6.
The role of emotional functioning in the development and maintenance of obesity has been investigated, but the literature is poorly integrated. A systematic review and meta‐analysis was performed to explore emotional processing impairments in obesity. PubMed, Web of Knowledge and PsycINFO databases were searched in March 2016, yielding 31 studies comparing emotional processing competencies in individuals with obesity, with or without binge eating disorder (BED), and control groups. Meta‐analyses demonstrated that individuals with obesity had higher scores of alexithymia (d = 0.53), difficulty in identifying feelings (d = 0.34) and externally oriented thinking style (d = 0.31), when compared with control groups. On other competencies, patients with obesity, especially those with comorbid BED, reported lower levels of emotional awareness and difficulty in using emotion regulation strategies, namely, reduced cognitive reappraisal and acceptance, and greater suppression of expression. No evidence of impaired ability to recognize emotions in others or verbally express emotions was found. A general emotion‐processing deficit in obesity was not supported. Instead, an emotional avoidance style may occur modulating later responses of emotion regulation. Additional research is needed to extend the comprehension of these conclusions and the role of BED in emotional functioning in obesity.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Studies of self-consciousness in dementia concern essentially anosognosia or the loss of insight. However, Self-consciousness is multifaceted: it includes awareness of the body, perceptions, one's own history, identity, and one's own projects. Self-consciousness is linked to consciousness of others i.e. to social cognition supported by identification of others, but also by comprehension of facial expression of emotions, comprehension and expression of emotional prosody, pragmatic abilities, ability to infer other's people's mental states, thoughts, and feelings (theory of mind and empathy), knowledge of social norms and rules, social reasoning. The subtypes of dementias (and namely Alzheimer's disease and frontotemporal dementia) affect heterogeneously the different aspects of the self-and other-consciousness. Further studies are needed for a better knowledge of the complex relationship between Self-consciousness, social cognition, decision making and neuropsychiatric symptoms and behavioral disturbances occurring in demented patients.  相似文献   

9.
An appreciation for the emotion work required of nursing home staff suggests that caregiver education should address the skills of emotional intelligence. Although the number of training efforts geared toward paraprofessionals is growing, few programs address caregivers' emotional skills, and fewer still have their roots in research. After providing background on resident-centered care, caring for the caregiver, and emotions in dementia, this paper describes a research-based workshop that promotes nursing home staff's skills in emotional intelligence. The first segment of the workshop introduces the importance of being aware of one's feelings and controlling impulses, and discusses how to manage one's own emotions. The second segment focuses on recognizing residents' emotions and helping residents manage their emotions.  相似文献   

10.
The study SUWADEM has completed the long overdue transition from objective to subjective research in the field of dementia in Germany. The perception and coping processes are reconstructed on the basis of 25 interviews with people with dementia (Pwids) and their family members. Data collection and analysis were conducted on principle of a qualitative research method, the "Grounded Theory". The subjective experience of dementia was presented in a biopsycho-social perspective. On the basis of the identified subjective ageing and disease theories, Pwids evaluate their perceived cognitive and functional deficits. According to the evaluation outcome the emotional distress varies. The lack of insight into the disease (anosognosia) in the early stage is mainly due to psychological (e.g. internalised stereotypes concerning old age) and social factors (e.g. undifferentiated subjective disease theories of person in authority). Within the framework of the disease coping process, anosognosia is a function of different forms of self-protection: (1) The regulation of emotions and the stabilisation of the sense of self-worth, (2) resistance to stigmatisation, (3) defence of one's own autonomy. The results indicate the importance of public relations work, which is intended to raise public awareness of the early stages of dementia. In addition Pwids have to be active partners in dementia research and in the development of support structures. Finally the development and evaluation of person-centered single- and group-interventions is absolutely necessary.  相似文献   

11.
There is a lack of studies about loneliness and cognitive functioning among elderly people and, above all, among those with cognitive impairment. The aim of this study is to investigate loneliness, both social and emotional, in non-demented and demented elderly people. The study is based on 589 persons, who answered the question about social loneliness (often being lonely) in the Kungsholmen longitudinal project. All subjects were examined extensively to reach a diagnosis and to determine the dementia level. Data were collected through structured interviews on subjective social loneliness as well as emotional loneliness (feelings of loneliness, from often to never) and background variables (age, sex, housing and housing conditions). Non-demented elderly subjects reported themselves to be lonely significantly less often compared to demented subjects, but there were no differences in the emotional experience of loneliness. Social loneliness was more common in the different levels of dementia and increased with reduced cognitive functioning, while emotional loneliness decreased. Living together with someone and living in one's own apartment showed a positive influence on feelings of loneliness.  相似文献   

12.
A century-long debate on bodily states and emotions persists. While the involvement of bodily activity in emotion physiology is widely recognized, the specificity and causal role of such activity related to brain dynamics has not yet been demonstrated. We hypothesize that the peripheral neural control on cardiovascular activity prompts and sustains brain dynamics during an emotional experience, so these afferent inputs are processed by the brain by triggering a concurrent efferent information transfer to the body. To this end, we investigated the functional brain–heart interplay under emotion elicitation in publicly available data from 62 healthy subjects using a computational model based on synthetic data generation of electroencephalography and electrocardiography signals. Our findings show that sympathovagal activity plays a leading and causal role in initiating the emotional response, in which ascending modulations from vagal activity precede neural dynamics and correlate to the reported level of arousal. The subsequent dynamic interplay observed between the central and autonomic nervous systems sustains the processing of emotional arousal. These findings should be particularly revealing for the psychophysiology and neuroscience of emotions.

“What Is an Emotion?” by William James (1), published more than a century ago, started the scientific debate on the nature of emotions. However, a shared and definitive theory of emotions is not in place yet, and the very definition of emotions and their nature is still a matter of debate. While more “classical” theories point to emotions as “the functional states of the brain that provide causal explanations of certain complex behaviors—like evading a predator or attacking prey” (2), other theories suggest how they are constructions of the world, not reactions to it (3). Namely, emotions are internal states constructed on the basis of previous experiences as predictive schemes to react to external stimuli.The role of bodily activity in emotions is often questioned. Despite the vast literature showing bodily correlates with emotions, a long-lasting debate about the relationship between bodily states and emotions persists (4). For instance, a feeling is defined as the subjective metarepresentation and labeling of physiological changes (such as an increase in heart rate, the increase of blood pressure, or changes in peristalsis) (5) that are strictly related to the body state on the one hand and to emotions on the other. To this extent, emotions are complex psychological phenomena in which feelings are interpreted and labeled. In a particular psychopathological condition known as alexithymia, individuals experience difficulties in experiencing and understanding emotions to various degrees (6). Indeed, some of these patients can perceive the physical changes connected to a feeling but are unable to label it as emotion, so that emotional experience is described only as its physical counterpart [e.g., described an experience as “I have my heart beating too fast” instead of “I’m fearful” (7)]. From a biological point of view the way in which physical changes become feelings and emotions is based on the interplay between the central and the autonomic nervous systems.The central nervous system (CNS) communicates with the autonomic nervous system (ANS) through interoceptive neural circuits that contribute to physiological functions beyond homeostatic control, from the emotional experience and the genesis of feelings (8) to decision making (9, 10). The debate about the role of the ANS in emotions can be condensed into two views: specificity or causation (4). The specificity view is related to the James–Lange theory, which states that bodily responses precede emotions’ central processing, meaning that bodily states would be a response to the environment, followed by an interpretation carried out by the CNS that would result in the feeling felt. However, causation theories represent an updated view of the James–Lange theory, suggesting that peripheral changes influence the conscious emotional experience; from a biological point of view this may reflect the fact that autonomic nervous signals from the body do influence perceptual activity in the brain (11, 12). In this regard, subjective perception may be influenced or shaped by ascending communication from visceral inputs to the brain (1315).Functional models of CNS and ANS interplay have described bidirectional dynamics in emotions (1618). In particular, the functional brain–heart interplay (BHI) involves brain structures that comprise the central autonomic network (CAN), which has been described as being in charge of autonomic control (19, 20). Moreover, the default mode network (DMN) has been found to be involved in autonomic control (21) and tasks of self-related cognition and interoception (22, 23), suggesting that the DMN participates in both ascending and descending communications with the heart. Finally, the constructed emotion theory suggests how DMN together with other intrinsic networks is crucial in the genesis of emotion and emotional experience (3).Psychophysiological studies have uncovered several correlates of different autonomic signals in the brain during emotional experiences (2427). To understand these correlations and the functional interactions between the heart and brain, various signal processing methods have been proposed to investigate functional BHI through noninvasive recordings (28). The study of emotions using these methods comprises the analysis of heartbeat-evoked potentials (29), nonlinear couplings (30), and information transfer modeling (31). However, the causative role of bodily inputs remains unknown (4) and, more specifically, the temporal and causal links between cortical and peripheral neural dynamics in both ascending and descending directions, i.e., from the brain to the body and from the body to the brain, are still to be clarified.In this study, we take a step forward in answering these scientific questions and investigate whether peripheral neural dynamics play a causal role in the genesis of emotions. We applied a mathematical model of functional BHI based on synthetic data generation (SDG) (32), estimating the directionality of the functional interplay using simultaneous electroencephalography (EEG) and electrocardiography (ECG) recordings gathered from healthy subjects undergoing emotion elicitations with video clips, the publicly available DEAP and MAHNOB datasets (33, 34). ECG series were analyzed to derive heart-rate variability (HRV) series, which result from the concurrent activity of the sympathetic and parasympathetic (vagal) branches of the ANS acting to regulate the heartbeat. We hypothesize that, from a neurobiological point of view, feelings and subsequent emotional experiences arise from the mutual interplay between brain and body, particularly in which the CNS integrates the afferent ANS information outflow, namely from-heart-to-brain interplay, which actually triggers a cascade of cortical neural activations that, in turn, modulate directed neural control onto the heart, namely from brain-to-heart interplay.  相似文献   

13.
The complexity of positive and negative emotions was examined in a sample of 40 adults between the ages of 60 and 85 years. Participants' emotional experiences were assessed by use of a 30-day assessment protocol. Results suggest that different vulnerability and resilience factors are implicated in the intraindividual experience of positive and negative emotions. Individual differences in perceived stress and neuroticism were associated with less differentiation and fewer co-occurrences of positive and negative emotional experiences. In contrast, dispositional resilience predicted greater differentiation and more co-occurrences of affective states. Findings are interpreted within the framework of life-span theories of emotions.  相似文献   

14.
BACKGROUND. Prior studies have had difficulty identifying factors that significantly explain patients' delay in responding to symptoms of acute myocardial infarction (AMI). METHODS AND RESULTS. We therefore examined factors affecting the time between symptom onset and hospital arrival for 103 AMI patients admitted to a Detroit metropolitan hospital between October 1989 and January 1990. Variables evaluated included demographic and medical history factors, psychological characteristics of somatic and emotional awareness, and type A behavior. The mean prehospital delay time was 9.0 +/- 10.8 hours (median, 5.0 hours; range, 0.25-62.0 hours). Delay time was not significantly associated with demographic or medical history categories or with type A behavior. Of study variables that can be identified prior to evolution of an AMI, somatic and emotional awareness were the only factors significantly predictive of delay time. Patients who were more capable of identifying inner experiences of emotions and/or bodily sensations sought treatment significantly earlier than patients with low emotional or somatic awareness (low emotional awareness median delay, 12.8 hours; high emotional awareness median delay, 3.8 hours; low somatic awareness median delay, 7 hours; high somatic awareness median delay, 4 hours). CONCLUSIONS. Variations in sensitivity to bodily sensations and emotions appear to play an important role in treatment seeking and thus potentially in treatment outcome for AMI patients. Assessment of these characteristics in patients with coronary risk factors could allow early identification of persons at risk of excessive delay in responding to symptoms of AMI.  相似文献   

15.
This research used data from a study on daily emotional experience in adulthood to examine the associations between age, emotion complexity, and emotion regulation. Data were drawn from a study of daily stress that included 239 participants ranging in age from 18 to 89 from North Central Florida. Two indicators of emotion complexity were considered: emotion differentiation and the co-occurrence of positive and negative affect. Emotion regulation was assessed in terms of individuals’ likelihood of maintaining adaptive emotion states. There were no age differences in adults’ co-occurrence of positive and negative emotions. In contrast to theories suggesting age would be associated with greater emotion complexity, the findings revealed that older adults had lower differentiation scores than younger adults. Age was also associated with more adaptive patterns of emotion regulation. Specifically, older adults persisted in low negative states and moved out of high negative states more readily than younger adults. Finally, neuroticism, self-concept incoherence, mean daily stress, and emotion complexity were associated with emotion regulation. Notably, adults who reported a greater mix of positive and negative affect moved out of high negative affect states more rapidly than adults with lower co-occurrence scores. This finding is in keeping with a growing body of work suggesting that positive affect promotes recovery from negative affect. Overall, the findings suggest that although emotion complexity is associated with emotion regulation, it does not appear to be a key factor underlying age differences in emotion regulation.  相似文献   

16.
Empirical tests of socioemotional selectivity theory support the contention that the developmental trend in adulthood to focus increasingly on fewer, but emotionally significant, social partners is associated positively with psychological well-being. Tenets of the theory, however, also suggest conditions in which selectivity could instead lead to an increase in negative emotional experiences. In particular, if the socioemotional world of the individual includes emotional distress, selective focus on emotions and close relationships may detract from rather than enhance well-being. In the current study, we examined selectivity and associated well-being in Holocaust survivors, Japanese-American internment camp survivors, and comparably-aged people who lived through World War II but did not experience major trauma. We predicted that selectivity would relate to positive mental health in all groups except the Holocaust survivors who, on average, experience elevated levels of negative affect and social networks that include other survivors also experiencing distress. Results generally supported these hypotheses, and are discussed in light of individual and group differences in socioemotional ageing, as well as the implications for the generality of social developmental theories of adaptive functioning. He completed his undergraduate work at Stanford University and his Ph.D. at the University of Pennsylvania. His research focuses on emotion in adulthood and old age. He is currently the editor of theJournal of College Counseling and the Chair of the Council of Journal Editors for the American Counseling Association. His publications are mostly in the areas of multicultural psychology and the psychology of religion. She has published extensively about emotional, cognitive, and motivational changes with age and formulated socioemotional selectivity theory. Dr. Carstensen is currently Chair of the National Academy of Sciences Committee on Social Psychology and Aging. In 1998, she received Stanford University’s Deans Award for Distinguished Teaching.  相似文献   

17.
A fundamental issue in human development concerns how the young infant's ability to recognize emotional signals is acquired through both biological programming and learning factors. This issue is extremely difficult to investigate because of the variety of sensory experiences to which humans are exposed immediately after birth. We examined the effects of emotional experience on emotion recognition by studying abused children, whose experiences violated cultural standards of care. We found that the aberrant social experience of abuse was associated with a change in children's perceptual preferences and also altered the discriminative abilities that influence how children categorize angry facial expressions. This study suggests that affective experiences can influence perceptual representations of basic emotions.  相似文献   

18.
BACKGROUND: Alcoholism is characterized by deficits in emotional functioning as well as by deficits in cognitive functioning. However, most brain imaging research on alcoholism has focused on cognition rather than emotion. METHOD: We used an event-related functional magnetic imaging approach to examine alcoholics' brain blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) response to evaluation of emotional stimuli and to compare their response to that of nonalcoholic controls. The task used was a simplified variant of a facial emotion-decoding task in which subjects determined the intensity level of a target emotion displayed as a facial expression. Facial expressions of happy, sad, anger, disgust, and fear were used as stimuli. RESULTS: Alcoholics and controls did not differ in accurately identifying the intensity level on the simple emotional decoding task but there were significant differences in their BOLD response during evaluation of facial emotion. In general, alcoholics showed less brain activation than nonalcoholic controls. The greatest differences in activation were during decoding of facial expressions of fear and disgust during which alcoholics had significantly less activation than controls in the affective division of the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC). Alcoholics also had significantly less activation than controls in the affective division of the ACC, while viewing sad faces. Only to facial expressions of anger did the alcoholics show significant activation in the affective ACC and in this case, their BOLD response did not significantly differ from that of the controls. CONCLUSION: Alcoholics show a deficit in the function of the affective division of the ACC during evaluation of negative facial emotions that can serve as cues for flight or avoidance. This deficit may underlie some of the behavioral dysfunction in alcoholism.  相似文献   

19.
Facial expressions of emotion are not culturally universal   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Since Darwin's seminal works, the universality of facial expressions of emotion has remained one of the longest standing debates in the biological and social sciences. Briefly stated, the universality hypothesis claims that all humans communicate six basic internal emotional states (happy, surprise, fear, disgust, anger, and sad) using the same facial movements by virtue of their biological and evolutionary origins [Susskind JM, et al. (2008) Nat Neurosci 11:843-850]. Here, we refute this assumed universality. Using a unique computer graphics platform that combines generative grammars [Chomsky N (1965) MIT Press, Cambridge, MA] with visual perception, we accessed the mind's eye of 30 Western and Eastern culture individuals and reconstructed their mental representations of the six basic facial expressions of emotion. Cross-cultural comparisons of the mental representations challenge universality on two separate counts. First, whereas Westerners represent each of the six basic emotions with a distinct set of facial movements common to the group, Easterners do not. Second, Easterners represent emotional intensity with distinctive dynamic eye activity. By refuting the long-standing universality hypothesis, our data highlight the powerful influence of culture on shaping basic behaviors once considered biologically hardwired. Consequently, our data open a unique nature-nurture debate across broad fields from evolutionary psychology and social neuroscience to social networking via digital avatars.  相似文献   

20.
The purpose of this study was to examine changes in the facial expression of emotion across the adult life span. Two positive and two negative emotional expressions were posed by 30 young (21 to 39 years), 30 middle-aged (40 to 59 years), and 30 older (60 to 81 years) healthy, right-handed women. Photographs of the four emotional expressions were rated by independent judges for intensity, accuracy, and confidence. Special features of this study were the use of a neutral face as a nonemotional control, as well as careful cognitive and affective screening procedures for posers and judges. Overall, the expressions of older posers were rated as significantly less accurate and with significantly less confidence than those of younger posers. Although the neutral faces of older posers were rated as significantly more intense than those of younger posers, there were no significant age-related intensity differences for positive and negative emotions. The results are discussed in terms of theoretical models of aging.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号