About the Book
This volume is a comprehensive roadmap to the burgeoning area of affective sciences, which now spans several disciplines. The Handbook brings together, for the first time, the various strands of inquiry and latest research in the scientific study of the relationship between the mechanisms of the brain and the psychology of mind. In recent years, scientists have made considerable advances in understanding how brain processes shape emotions and
are changed by human emotion. Drawing on a wide range of neuroimaging techniques, neuropsychological assessment, and clinical research, scientists are beginning to understand the biological mechanisms for
emotions. As a result, researchers are gaining insight into such compelling questions as: How do people experience life emotionally? Why do people respond so differently to the same experiences? What can the face tell us about internal states? How does emotion in significant social relationships influence health? Are there basic emotions common to all humans? This volume brings together the most eminent scholars in the field to present, in sixty original chapters, the latest
research and theories in the field. The book is divided into ten sections: Neuroscience; Autonomic Psychophysiology; Genetics and Development; Expression; Components of Emotion; Personality; Emotion and
Social Processes; Adaptation, Culture, and Evolution; Emotion and Psychopathology; and Emotion and Health. This major new volume will be an invaluable resource for researchers that will define affective sciences for the next decade.
Table of Contents:
Contributors
Introduction
Part I. Neuroscience
1: Richard J. Davidson, Klaus R. Scherer, and H. Hill Goldsmith: Introduction: Neuroscience
2: Richard J. Davidson, Diego Pizzagalli, Jack B. Nitschke, and Ned H. Kalin: Parsing the Subcomponents of Emotion and Disorders of Emotion: Perspectives from Affective Neuroscience
3: Kent C. Berridge: Comparing the Emotional Brains of Humans and Other Animals
4: Kevin S. LaBar and Joseph E. LeDoux: Emotional Learning Circuits in Animals and Humans
5: Antonio R. Damasio, Ralph Adolphs, and H. Damasio: The Contributions of the Lesion Method to the Functional Neuroanatomy of Emotion
6: James L. McGaugh and Larry Cahill: Emotion and Memory: Central and Peripheral Contributions
7: Rebecca Elliot and Raymond J. Dolan Part II. Autonomic Psychophysiology: Fundamental Neuroimaging of Depression: A Role for Medial Prefrontal Cortex
8: Gerhard Stemmler: Introduction: Autonomic Psychophysiology
9: Wilfrid Janig: The Autonomic Nervous System and Its Coordination by the Brain
10: Alfons O. Hamm, Harald T. Schupp, and Almut I. Weike: Motivational Organization of Emotions: Autonomic Changes, Cortical Responses, and Reflex Modulation
11: Robert W. Levenson: Autonomic Specificity and Emotion
12: Gerhard Stemmler: Methodological Considerations in the Psychophysiological Study of Emotion
13: Arne Öhman, Stefan Wiens: On the Autonomaticity of Autonomic Responses in Emotion: an Evolutionary Perspective
14: Kenneth Hugdahl, Kjell M. Stormark: Emotional Modulation of Selective Attention: Behavioral and Psychophysiological Measures
Part III. Genetics and Development
15: H. Hill Goldsmith: Introduction: Genetics and Development
16: H. Hill Goldsmith: Genetics of Emotional Development
17: Jerome Kagan: Behavioral Inhibition as a Temperamental Category
18: Judy Dunn: Emotional Development in Early Childhood: a Social Relationship Perspective
19: Claire B. Kopp, Susan J. Neufeld: Emotional Development During Infancy
20: Michael F. Mascolo, Kurt W. Fischer, and Jin Li: Dynamic Development of Component Systems of Emotions: Pride, Shame, and Guilt in China and the United States
Part IV. Expression of Emotion
21: Dacher Keltner and Paul Ekman: Introduction: Expression of Emotion
22: Dacher Keltner, Paul Ekman, Gian C. Gonzaga, and Jennifer Beer: Facial Expression of Emotion
23: Klaus R. Scherer, Tom Johnstone, and Gundrun Klasmeyer: Vocal Expression of Emotion
24: Charles T. Snowdon: Expression of Emotion in Nonhuman Animals
25: Keith Oatley: Creative Expression and Communication of Emotions in the Visual and Narrative Arts
26: Alf Gabrielsson and Patrik N. Juslin: Emotional Expression in Music
27: Judy Reilly and Laura Seibert: Language and Emotion
Part V. Cognitive Components of Emotion
28: Klaus R. Scherer: Introduction: Cognitive Components of Emotion
29: Phoebe C. Ellsworth and Klaus R. Scherer: Appraisal Processes in Emotion
30: Joseph P. Forgas: Affective Influences on Attitudes and Judgments
31: George Loewenstein and Jennifer S. Lerner: The Role of Affect in Decision Making
32: Kevin N. Ochsner, and Daniel L. Schacter: Remembering Emotional Events: a Social Cognitive Neuroscience Approach
33: Tim Dalgleish: Information Processing Approaches to Emotion
Part VI. Personality
34: H. Hill Goldsmith and Richard J. Davidson: Introduction: Personality
35: Douglas Derryberry and Marjorie A. Reed: Information Processing Approaches to Individual Differences in Emotional Reactivity
36: Heinz W. Krohne: Individual Differences in Emotional Reactions and Coping
37: Laura L. Carstensen, Susan T. Charles, Derek M. Isaacowitz, and Quinn Kennedy: Emotion and Life-Span Personality Development
Part VII. Emotion and Social Processes
38: Peter Salovey: Introduction: Emotion and Social Processes
39: Richard E. Petty, Leandre R. Fabrigar, and Duane T. Wegener: Emotional Factors in Attitudes and Persuasion
40: Mark R. Leary: The Self and Emotion: The Role of Self-Reflection in the Generation and Regulation of Affective Experience
41: Nancy Eisenberg, Sandy Losoya, and Tracy Spinrad: Affect and Prosocial Responding
42: Leonard Berkowitz: Affect, Aggression, and Antisocial Behavior
43: Margaret S. Clark and Ian Brissette: Two Types of Relationship Closeness and Their Influence on People's Emotional Lives
Part VIII. Evolutionary and Cultural Perspectives on Affect
44: Paul Rozin: Introduction: Evolutionary and Cultural Perspectives on Affect
45: Jonathan Haidt: The Moral Emotions
46: Batja Mesquita: Emotions as Dynamic Cultural Phenomena
47: Robert H. Frank: Adaptive Rationality and the Moral Emotions
Part IX. Emotion and Psychopathology
48: Robert M. Post: Introduction: Emotion and Psychopathology
49: Joseph P. Newman and Amanda R. Lorenz: Response Modulation and Emotion Processing: Implications for Psychopathy and Other Dysregulatory Psychopathology
50: Terence A. Ketter, Po W. Wang, Anna Lembke, and Nadia Sachs: Physiological and Pharmacological Induction of Affect
51: Scott L. Rauch: Neuroimaging and the Neurobiology of Anxiety Disorders
52: Susan Mineka, Eshkol Rafaeli, and Iftah Yovel: Cognitive Biases in Emotional Disorders: Information Processing and Social-Cognitive Perspectives
53: Thomas R. Insel: The Neurobiology of Affiliation: Implications for Autism
54: Steven J. Garlow and Charles B. Nemeroff: Neurobiology of Depressive Disorders
Part X. Emotion and Health
55: John T. Cacioppo: Introduction: Emotion and Health
56: Janine Giese-Davis and David Spiegel: Emotional Expression and Cancer Progression
57: Carol D. Ryff and Burton H. Singer: The Role of Emotion on Pathways to Positive Health
58: Gary G. Berntson, John T. Cacioppo, and Martin Sarter: Bottom-Up: Implications for Neurobehavioral Models of Anxiety and Autonomic Regulation
59: Bruce S. McEwen and Teresa Seeman: Stress and Affect: Applicability of the Concepts of Allostasis and Allostatic Load
Index
Review :
"Overall, the real strength of this book is the comprehensive coverage of a wide range of different approaches to the study of emotion. It is an up-to-date manual that every researcher interested in emotion should display proudly. -Psychological Medicine, Vol. 34, 2004
This handbook will bring about the long-needed integration of the fragmented scholarship in the study of emotion, which advances in neuroscience have recently made possible. The combination of breadth, depth, and clarity will make this volume indispensable to students and to scholars for years to come." --Daniel Kahneman, Eugene Higgins Professor of Psychology, Princeton University
"The Handbook of Affective Sciences is the most comphrensive, authoritative, and up-to-date review available of issues pertaining to emotion. It will be an indispensable reference for anyone interested in understanding the nature of emotions and their relations to other psychological constructs."--Robert J. Sternberg, President, American Psychological Association
"This volume defines a new field. Although 'affective science' draws on studies of emotion, it includes much more than what has traditionally been addressed under that rubric. This emerging discipline promises not only to forge crucial links between psychology and neuroscience, but also to build strong bridges between research in the laboratory and practice in the clinic. This book should be on the shelf of anyone seriously interested in psychology,
neuroscience, psychiatry, or neurology."--Stephen M. Kosslyn, John Lindsley Professor of Psychology, Harvard University