How Distinctive is Affective Processing? : A Special Issue of Cognition and Emotion book cover
1st Edition

How Distinctive is Affective Processing?
A Special Issue of Cognition and Emotion




ISBN 9781138883178
Published June 23, 2015 by Psychology Press
236 Pages

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Book Description

Influential theories on affect and emotion propose a fundamental differentiation between emotion and cognition, and research paradigms designed to test them focus on differences rather than similarities between affective and cognitive processes. This research orientation is increasingly challenged by the widespread and successful use of cognitive research paradigms in the study of affect and emotion – a challenge with far-reaching implications. Where and on what basis do theorists draw the line between cognition and emotion, and when is it useful to do so? Should researchers build more global, integrative models of cognition and emotion, or should they rely on local, content-specific models that draw attention to a differentiation between affective and cognitive processes? This special issue compiles different viewpoints on fundamental issues in the relationship between affect and cognition.

Table of Contents

A. B. Eder, B. Hommel, J De Houwer, How distinctive is affective processing? On the implications of using cognitive paradigms to study affect and emotion. P. J.Barnard, D. J. Duke, R. W. Byrne, I. Davidson, Differentiation in cognitive and emotional meanings: An evolutionary analysis. S. Duncan, L. Feldman Barrett, Affect is a form of cognition: A neurobiological analysis. J. Storbeck, G. L. Clore, On the interdependence of cognition and emotion. A. Moors, Can cognitive methods be used to study the unique aspect of emotion: An appraisal theorist’s answer. T. Lavender, B. Hommel, Affect and action: Towards an event-coding account. A.B. Eder, K.C Klauer, Common valence coding in action and evaluation: Affective blindness towards response-compatible stimuli. M. Rotteveel, R.H Phaf, Mere exposure in reverse: Mood and motion modulate memory bias. J. T. Cacioppo, Affective Distinctiveness: Illusory or Real?

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Editor(s)

Biography

Andreas B. Eder is at the Institut für Psychologie at the Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena, Germany.

Bernhard Hommel works in the Department of Psychology at Leiden University in the Netherlands. 

Jan De Houwer is in the Psychology Department at the University of Ghent, Belgium.