Emotion in the Digital Age

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A01=Darren Ellis
A01=Ian Tucker
Affective Atmospheres
affective computing
Affective Life
AI emotional modelling
American Psychiatric Association
artificial emotion
Author_Darren Ellis
Author_Ian Tucker
Blooming Field
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CBT.
CCTV Surveillance
Collective Individuation
cultural studies
Darren Ellis
digital age
digital gaming
Digital Surveillance
digital surveillance studies
digital technologies
digitized emotion
emotion technology impact research
emotions
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everyday life
future
game studies
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Google’s Play Store
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Mass Digitisation
media studies
mental health technology
Mental Ill Health
online gaming
online support
philosophies
Play Store
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Positive Training Samples
practice
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Psychological Ownership Theory
psychology
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research
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Sentic States
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Simondon’s Theory
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UK General Election

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138091030
  • Weight: 420g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Oct 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Emotion in the Digital Age examines how emotion is understood, researched and experienced in relation to practices of digitisation and datafication said to constitute a digital age. The overarching concern of the book is with how emotion operates in, through, and with digital technologies. The digital landscape is vast, and as such, the authors focus on four key areas of digital practice: artificial intelligence, social media, mental health, and surveillance. Interrogating each area shows how emotion is commodified, symbolised, shared and experienced, and as such operates in multiple dimensions. This includes tracing the emotional impact of early mass media (e.g. cinema) through to efforts to programme AI agents with skills in emotional communication (e.g. mental health chatbots). This timely study offers theoretical, empirical and practical insight regarding the ways that digitisation is changing knowledge and experience of emotion and affective life. Crucially, this involves both the multiple versions of digital technologies designed to engage with emotion (e.g. emotional-AI) through to the broader emotional impact of living in digitally saturated environments. The authors argue that this constitutes a psycho-social way of being in which digital technologies and emotion operate as key dimensions of the ways we simultaneously relate to ourselves as individual subjects and to others as part of collectives. As such, Emotion in the Digital Age will prove important reading for students and researchers in emotion studies, psychology, science and technology studies, sociology, and related fields.

Darren Ellis is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Social Sciences at the University of East London, UK, and co-author of Social Psychology of Emotion. Ian Tucker is Professor in the School of Psychology at the University of East London, UK, and co-author of Social Psychology of Emotion.

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