Thought and Feeling

Regular price €179.80
A01=Richard E. Nisbett
AC Stimulus
affective state labeling
Anesthesia Instructions
attribution theory
Author_Richard E. Nisbett
Beck Aaron
behavioral neuroscience
Boredom Scale
Brendan Maher
Category=JM
Charles Turner
Daryl J. Bem
E. Nisbett Richard
E. Singer Jerome
emotion attribution mechanisms
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eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Exposure Times
Extinction Trials
False Feedback
False Heart Rate Feedback
Female Nudes
George O. Klemp
Gerald Lang
GSR.
Harvey London
Heart Rate Feedback
Heart Rate Reactions
High Importance Conditions
Howard Leventha
Hypnotic Depth
Hypnotic Induction Procedure
Hypnotic Subjects
internal cues analysis
Introductory Psychology Subject Pool
James Laird
John C. Barefoot
Karl P. Koenig
Kermit Henriksen
Lenore Monello
Leonard Berkowitz
London Harvey
Low Importance Conditions
Melvin Crosby
Michael D. Storms
Nicholas P. Spanos
O'Neal Edgar
Overweight Individuals
Overweight Subjects
Pain Test
Painful Sensory Input
physiological psychology
Played Back
Richard E. Nisbett
Ronald B. Straub
Schachter's Theory
Schachter's Work
Schachter’s Theory
Schachter’s Work
social cognition
Stuart Vajins
T. X. Barber

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138539648
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Sep 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Recently there has been growing awareness and acceptance of the proposition that people do not exist in a world of physically defined forces and events, but in a world defined by their own perceptions, cognitions, conclusions, and imaginations. We respond and react not to some objectively defined set of stimuli, but to our own apperceptions of stimuli that we define subjectively. The original essays in this volume center on one aspect of this process of attribution: The extent to which the perception of events and causes results in the determination, modification, or alteration of emotions, feelings, and affective states.

This book is divided into five sections, each of which elucidates and extends these theoretical conceptions. Part 1 provides a historical background and analytical framework for the rest of the book. Part 2 presents chapters dealing with the sorts of internal cues which may give rise to a feeling state. Part 3 presents a chapter discussing the evaluative needs aroused by the internal cues. Part 4 is concerned with the process of explanation triggered by the evaluative needs. Part 5 deals with various external cues and how they are used to label the internal feeling state. There is a concluding discussion of the cognitive alteration of feeling states.

The authors deal with aggression, boredom, obesity, the control of pain, and delusional systems. This volume is of continuing importance to clinical and experimental psychologists as well as social psychologists. Each of the authors takes the theoretical concept of cognition and relates it to research in biofeedback, physiology, social psychology, altered states of consciousness, etc. Thus, the book bridges the gap between cognitive theory and the use of that theory in applied research.