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- Discrete emotion theory states that these specific core emotions are biologically determined emotional responses and fundamentally the same for all individuals irrespective of ethnicity or cultural differences. Various parts of the brain can trigger different emotions. For example, the amygdala is the center of fear.
www.medicinenet.com/what_are_the_12_emotions/article.htm
Discrete Emotion refers to the concept of fundamental emotions, such as happiness, sadness, anger, surprise, disgust, and fear, that are universally shared among cultures and quantified using ordinal values for emotional expression levels.
- Emotion Category
On Computational Models of Emotion Regulation and Their...
- Emotion Recognition
Facial emotion recognition tasks require participants to...
- A Critical Review
A growing body of research has documented key roles for...
- Emotion Category
Nov 1, 2007 · A growing body of research has documented key roles for several broad affective constructs – notably anxiety, depression, and anger/hostility – in areas ranging from basic physiological processes, health behaviors, and symptom reporting, to screening and detection behaviors and decision making.
- Nathan S. Consedine, Judith Tedlie Moskowitz
- 2007
The Default Mode Network (DMN) has been linked with emotion but its mechanistic role remains unclear. Most prior accounts link DMN to emotion given the role of VMPFC in more general affective processing (valence and arousal) or the broader DMN in generating internal states.
Aug 8, 2016 · The current manuscript presents four studies that validate a new instrument, the Discrete Emotions Questionnaire (DEQ), that is sensitive to eight distinct state emotions: anger, disgust, fear, anxiety, sadness, happiness, relaxation, and desire.
- Cindy Harmon-Jones, Brock Bastian, Eddie Harmon-Jones
- 2016
This evidence suggests that a discrete emotions perspective is useful to understanding individual differences in the dimension of affective valence. Attitudes toward discrete emotions may also serve important functions.
Aug 3, 2023 · Eliciting emotions is key to persuasion because attitudes have a cognitive and emotive component, with predictable physiological outcomes that make messages more resonant and impactful on behaviour, supporting policy objectives.
Discrete emotion feelings play a central role in anticipating the effects of future stimulations and in organizing and integrating the associated information for envisioning strategies and entraining impulses for targeted goal-directed cognitive processes and actions.