Anxiety- and mood disorders
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Cognition and emotion: form order to disorder
Power, M & Dalgleish, T (2015)
Chapter 3
Cognitive theories of emotion
Two main groups of theories
The starting point for the theories to be presented is an attempt to provide a cognitive account of normal emotions.
Zajonc argued that the initial procession of stimuli assesses the affective tone of the stimulus as positive or negative, safe or threatening, and that ‘cognitive’ processes occur subsequent to this affective processing.
Dimensions
There have been several related proposals that have focused on dimensions such as valance and arousal.
Subsequent theories have divided up the dimensions of valence and arousal.
Gray argued that the arousal system is in fact two separate systems
Watson argued that the Valence dimension should be divided into two separate orthogonal dimensions, one of which is positive and the other negative (instead of bipolar)
Although studies of self-reported emotion and affect have been taken to support the dimensional structure of emotion (with most support for two separate dimensions of Valence and Arousal), there are a number of short-comings of these studies in relation to measurement problems.
Basic emotions
Basicness means that there is a small handful of core human emotions.
This provides a framework within which to divide up, integrate and organize the confusion of our emotional experience.
Also provides a way into other important approaches to emotions (such as evolution) and the foundations for a bridge between the study of human emotions and research into the emotional experiences of other species.
The concept of emotion includes an event, a perception or interpretation, an appraisal, physiological change, a propensity for action, and conscious awareness.
Emotion as a paradigm could embrace overt behaviour.
In philosophical terms, it is only meaningful to distinguish one emotion from another on the basis of the appraisal component.
A case can be made for distinguishing emotions on the basis of core components other can appraisal.
But the physiological component of emotion must principally be involved in preparing the system to carry out any behaviour necessary to satisfy the propensity-for-action component of emotion, there is considerable overlap in this.
Different emotions can give rise to similar propensities for action, and similar interpretations can give rise to different emotions.
So, emotions can only be meaningfully distinguished on the basis of their appraisal components.
A common criticism of basic emotions is that they are an empirically driven concept with little theoretical justification.
And, there are numerous conflicting definitions and proposals about what basic emotions are.
Basic emotions would be a small set of core emotions in the form of combinations of the components of event, interpretation, physiological change, appraisal, propensity for action, and conscious awareness.
Each emotion in this core set would be distinguished on the basis of its own distinct appraisal parameters.
This analysis of basic emotions allows for the possibility that different basic emotions could include similar physiological change components or be associated with similar behavioural correlates.
What are the inclusion criteria for the core emotions?
A basic emotion is one that incorporates one of a core set of basic scenarios that may either be distinct and universal or merely distinct, ubiquitous and subject to minor variation.
Empirical data that would be seen as supportive of such a conceptualization.
A host of different writers and researchers have pledged the cause of basic emotions.
Ekman pointed out that every investigator has obtained evidence for a central list of six basic emotins
The status of surprise is questioned because it is a cognitive component that could be present with any emotion, rather than being an unique emotion in itself.
There are many ‘affects’, consciously experienced valenced states that are not related to emotion but that are related to drive-states or other cognitive experiential states.
Ekman suggests nine characteristics that distinguish basic emotions
There is supporting evidence from the developmental priority of basic emotions and the linguistic analysis of emotion terms.
Distinctive universals in antecedent events
The nature of the appraisal associated with each basic emotion is defined functionally.
This emphasis on functionality provides a set of parameters within which to address the pan-culturally of a core set of appraisal scenarios. Namely, a small number of higher-order goals that are related to survival and self-regulation.
In this analysis, there exist a small number of core human goals that are shared across cultures.
These goals are associated with a core set of appraisal, planning and action processes relating to the attainment, maintenance and reinstatement of the goals.
Basic emotions are seen as those that incorporate appraisal processes linked to these pan-cultural universal goals.
Evidence points to some universal aspects of appraisal.
It seems that the following list of basic emotions emerges from appraisal research
Distinctive universal signals
The work on facial expression has shown that there are a small number of core emotions, each of which can be characterised by a unique configuration of facial musculature.
Different cultures label emotions in the same way.
Some argue that it is not facial expressions that are universal signals, but the single muscle actions from which the expressions are compiled.
But questions are raised about the validity of this research.
Emotion-specific physiology
A number of writers have claimed distinctive patterns of autonomic nervous system activity for anger, fear and disgust, and possibly for sadness.
It seems difficult to draw a definitive conclusion about emotion-specific physiology.
Theoretical logic would dictate that physiology is specified at the level of the requisite behaviours.
This body of research claims to distinguish
The most profitable approach to the question of basicness is in terms of a core set of basic appraisal scenarios that emerge in most, if not all, human societies, and the emotions that incorporate these appraisal scenarios are the basic emotions.
There is considerable agreement between the conclusions of the different approaches.
The core list of basic emotions:
These four basic emotions would involve appraisals of stimuli in terms of current goals and plans being in some way compromised .
There is also a place for an emotional response to gaols and plans being successfully maintained.
This is the function of the brief emotion state of happiness and should also be regarded as a basic emotion.
The best fit of emotions included the basic emotion model as first-order factors and a higher order factor onto which all basic emotions loaded.
Freud argued that one or more early traumatic events, thoughts or wishes can form a ‘pathogenic nucleus’ around which later associated memories become attached according to a number of rules
The main impetus for the use of networks within cognitive science came from attempts to model the relationship between linguistic concepts.
Like hierarchical arrangement of groups of nouns.
Bower’s network theory
Bower proposed that concepts, events and emotions can all be represented as nodes within a network.
The type of network consists only of labelled links. The nodes themselves had no semantic labels.
Concepts, events and emotions are all represented as nodes within the network.
Activation within the network depends on a number of factors
Some of the expressive behaviour and automatic links may be innate.
Activation of one of the nodes in the network may spread to adjoining nodes.
There can be a mood-state dependent memory.
Problems and subsequent revisions
There are a number of empirical and theoretical problems with Bower’s theory.
Bower suggested a causal belonging hypothesis.
In order for the state-dependent effect to occur, subjects might need to perceive that the material to be learned has some meaningful relation to the mood state that they were experiencing.
But Bower made no suggestions at the time about how the network theory could be adapted to take account of this suggestion.
Bower and Forgas have presented an affect infusion model.
Multiple processing strategies, which may lead to more or less affect-priming effects according to which strategy is used, and which attempts to deal with some of the empirical problems for the affect-priming network model.
A number of potential theoretical problems with Bower’s network approach
Lang’s network theory
In Lang’s network approach, propositions are represented in the network through a combination of labelled nodes and links.
Nodes in a network are taken to represent arguments that are connected by links that are labelled with predicates.
Emotions were not single coherent emotional states, but expressed in the three systems of verbal report, behaviour and physiology.
These systems were only partially synchronised with each other, so that it was possible for an individual to show an emotion-like reaction in one or two of these systems, but not in the remainder.
Objection to Lang’s three systems approach
Three types of propositional networks are closely co-ordinated to for an ‘emotion prototype’ or ‘emotion schema’.
These are a stimulus network, a meaning network and a response network.
One advantage of this theory is the suggestion that there may be a higher level or organisation of the information.
The initial appraisal theories required an additional step to that of physiological or somatic responses, namely that of cognitive interpretation of a physiological state, for emotion to occur.
Schachter and singer
Arousal à Interpretation (including situational information) à emotion
The basic proposal of the Schachter and Singer’s theory was that emotion involved the cognitive interpretation of a state of bodily arousal.
This state of arousal was considered to be a general one in that the same arousal underpinned both positive and negative emotion. The crucial determinant for the type of emotion experienced was how the individual explained the state of arousal.
The cognitive interpretation could be based on prior knowledge of a situation.
In situations in which individuals are unclear about why they are aroused, the interpretation may be based on external cues provided by another person.
George Mandler
In Mandler’s theory, physiological arousal is considered to arise from perceived discrepancy or from the interruption to an ongoing goal or plan.
The arousal is seen as an undifferentiated physiological state that underlies both positive and negative emotions.
Cognition determines which emotion is actually experienced.
Arousal provides the intensity of the emotional state, and cognition provides its quality.
A particular event has a dual function in that on the one hand it triggers the state of arousal and on the other hand it provides input for the cognitive interpretative process.
Many of the discrepancies and interruptions that are experienced are not derived from hardwired reflex-like mechanisms, but are based on schema-derived expectations that are not fulfilled.
The interruption of a significant life goal may contribute to the development of more chronic negative emotional states.
In the relation to the experience of positive discrepancies, Mandler pointed out that humour often works through the failure to fulfil a schema-driven expectation.
Mandler’s theory bears similarities with Schachter and Singer’s approach, but it has the advantage that the cognitive mechanisms have a more elaborate or sophisticated role to play.
Cognitive processes both lead to the initial physiological arousal and then determine the type of emotion that is experienced.
This theory shares the weakness that it is based on a single type of autonomic arousal.
There is sufficient evidence to show that there is no single undifferentiated state of arousal that is the basis for all emotions, but rather there are distinct physiological states associated with different emotions or groups of emotions.
And, sometimes it may be the emotion that causes the interruption rather than vice versa.
Weiner
Weiner proposes that the occurrence of general or ‘primitive’ emotions may have little or no cognitive involvement.
Weiner appreciated that affective reactions were intimately connected.
Outcome à evaluation à Primitive (positive or negative emotions) + Causal attributions à Distinct emotions
The model assumes that inputs are classified into positive and negative and that the initial affective reactions are therefore of pleasure and displeasure.
These initial reactions are described as ‘outcome-dependent’. Attribution-independent emotions are normally triggered immediately and automatically.
The general positive and negative emotions are separate to the ‘distinct’ or ‘attribution-dependent’ emotions.
Undifferentiated physiological arousal is replaced by two different emotional states that have a range of motivational consequences and, the initial affective state does not provide the input for subsequent cognitive processing.
The type of account or causal explanation that individuals provide for the event or situation then determines which of the so-called distinct positive or negative emotions occur.
Key dimensions that determine which type of emotion is experienced
The types of attributions that individuals make for success or failure subsequently determine the types of positive and negative emotions that are experienced.
The theory was not developed specifically as a theory of emotion, but rather emotion has been fitted into the Procrustean bed of attribution theory.
Richard Lazarus
In the early version of Lazarus’s theory, emotion as considered to arise form how individuals construed or appraised their ongoing transactions with the world.
Cognitive appraisal was considered to occur in two stages
Primary and secondary appraisal processes work in conjunction with each other.
Secondary appraisal coping processes can be categorized into two main varieties
The weakness of this early theory lies in the fact that the theory focuses on stress in general and is not a theory of emotion perse.
Lazarus has presented a substantially modified version of his appraisal theory.
A Cognitive-motivational-relational theory.
The main proposal is that each emotion has a specific relational meaning or so-called core relational theme. The appraisal of a particular person-environment relation is unique to each emotion.
Types of appraisal
There may be more innate mechanisms linked to the appraisal of personal harm or benefit which are termed ‘action tendencies’.
These are the basis for the physiological patterns associated with each emotion.
Secondary appraisal can enhance, override or inhibit these innate action tendencies.
But, this whole enterprise requires more supporting empirical evidence than has been provided.
Leventhal and Scherer
Leventhal and Scherer argue that the operation of cognition and emotion is one of interdependence.
They distinguish between emotion and other reflex-like responses, because emotional processes decouple automatic, reflex responses form their eliciting stimuli and provide the opportunity for more adaptive reactions.
There are three main components that constitute the emotion system. These are organized hierarchically
This theory has primarily been in terms of the ‘stimulus evaluation checks’. These checks occur in the sequence:
The insistence on the sequential nature of the evaluation checks is based on the false presupposition that because one process may sometimes depend on the outcome of another process, therefore such processes must necessarily run sequentially.
And, this theory incorporated both primary and secondary appraisal into the evaluation checks.
Also, there is little empirical evidence or testing of the theory.
Oatley and Johnson-Laird
Oatley and Johnson-Laird propose that in a system engaged in multiple goals and plans there have to be mechanisms by which priority can be assigned because not all active goals and plans can be pursued at once.
One of the important roles for emotion is to provide a possible mechanisms by which such priorities can be assigned or altered.
In practice, the effect that emotion has on the assignment of priority to goals and plans occurs through two different mechanisms, one that is evolutionary older than the other
Emotion can occur through either route and there are several signals.
There is a set of at least five basic emotions that form the foundation for the theory.
This is based on empirical studies about emotion.
Other emotions are considered to be derived from one of these basic emotions through the inclusion of additional information.
Derived or complex emotions only involve one of the basic emotions, they offer a disjunctive theory.
But, (a critic) some complex emotions need to be defined conjunctively rather than disjunctively.
Each of the five basic emotions is linked to key junctures in goals and plans.
(Like sadness is linked to failure of a goal).
But, these junctures are sufficient but not necessary conditions for the occurrence of emotion.
Also, the emotion disgust is not dealt with extensively enough in this theory.
What should not be included in a theory of emotion
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The bundle is based on the course anxiety- and mood disorders taught at the third year of psychology at the University of Amsterdam.
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