• Jakimow, T 2020, ' Feeling/Making Democracy: Emotions of Candidates Contesting Dehradun Municipal Elections ', Ethnos: Journal of Anthropology , pp. 1-19. (edu.au)
  • Even after a century of effort, scientific research has not revealed a consistent, physical fingerprint for even a single emotion. (rrenstevens.com)
  • Despite tremendous time and investment, research has not revealed a consistent bodily fingerprint for even a single emotion. (rrenstevens.com)
  • No brain region contained the fingerprint for any single emotion. (lifeasalifestyle.com)
  • The theory of constructed emotion and the classical view of emotion tell vastly different stories of how we experience the world. (dericbownds.net)
  • The classical view of emotion holds that we have many such emotion circuits in our brains, and each is said to cause a distinct set of changes, that is, a fingerprint. (rrenstevens.com)
  • Despite the distinguished intellectual pedigree of the classical view of emotion, and despite its immense influence in our culture and society, there is abundant scientific evidence that this view cannot possibly be true. (rrenstevens.com)
  • On different occasions, in different contexts, in different studies, within the same individual and across different individuals, the same emotion category involves different bodily responses. (rrenstevens.com)
  • Mindfulness, defined as bringing moment-to-moment awareness of one's thoughts, emotions, and bodily sensations in a non-evaluative and accepting way, was introduced as a secular practice in mainstream settings in the late 1970's when Jon Kabat-Zinn developed the mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) program to help relieve chronic pain symptoms (1, 2). (researchsquare.com)
  • One idea is that an emotion category such as anger or disgust does not have a fingerprint. (dericbownds.net)
  • When the concepts involved are emotion concepts, your brain constructs instances of emotion…With concepts, your brain makes meaning of sensation, and sometimes that meaning is an emotion. (dericbownds.net)
  • Instead, combinations of different neurons can create instances of fear. (rrenstevens.com)
  • From a badly stubbed toe to teenage angst, there are many instances that make people cry. (scienceline.org)
  • Together they form a unique fingerprint. (edu.au)
  • Each member of the crew plays a unique instrument, contributing their skills and expertise to create a harmonious cinematic masterpiece. (artincontext.org)
  • Our movement is what makes us unique, it's like a digital fingerprint - it's a style and a signature, our DNA. (hennessy.com)
  • Dance is a mix of different, unique movements, vectors of emotion, and the art of blending depends on the emotions in different notes and unique eaux-de-vie. (hennessy.com)
  • You can read a bit more on the theory of how games are unique suited to creating emotional experiences in my previous essay on Shadow Emotions and Primary Emotions . (lostgarden.com)
  • Scientists concluded that emotion recognition is universal: no matter where you are born or grow up, you should be able to recognize American-style facial expressions like those in the (example) photos. (rrenstevens.com)
  • The only way expressions could be universally recognized, the reasoning went, is if they are universally produced: thus, facial expressions must be reliable, diagnostic fingerprints of emotion. (rrenstevens.com)
  • Our culture has created these facial expressions and we have all learned them. (lifeasalifestyle.com)
  • Rather, our findings are consistent with the hypothesis that people infer emotional meaning in facial movements using emotion knowledge embrained by cultural learning. (nature.com)
  • This hypothesis can be traced back, in part, to Charles Darwin's 1872 publication of The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals 1 , in which he stipulated that emotions are "expressed" across the animal kingdom via patterns of muscular discharge, such as coordinated sets of facial muscle contractions. (nature.com)
  • Then within those rough categories, you see variations that we recognize as distinct emotions. (lostgarden.com)
  • your brain uses this same process to make meaning of the sensations from inside your body-the commotion arising from your heartbeat, breathing, and other internal movements? (dericbownds.net)
  • Once your concepts enter the picture, however, those sensations may take on additional meaning… From an aching stomach, your brain can construct an instance of hunger, nausea, or mistrust…an instance of emotion. (dericbownds.net)
  • the theory of constructed emotion: In every waking moment, your brain uses past experience, organized as concepts, to guide your actions and give your sensations meaning. (dericbownds.net)
  • What's inevitable is that you'll have some kinds of concepts for making sense of sensory input from your body in the world because…your brain has wiring for this purpose. (dericbownds.net)
  • So we created three movements that allowed us to really blend everything together, culminating in the two stances depicted on the carafe and packaging. (hennessy.com)
  • According to the classical view, each emotion is displayed on the face as a particular pattern of movements - a "facial expression. (rrenstevens.com)
  • These movements are said to be part of the fingerprint of their respective emotions. (rrenstevens.com)
  • Turns out… An emotion like "Fear" does not have a single expression but a diverse population of facial movements that vary from one situation to the next. (rrenstevens.com)
  • Brain regions like the amygdala are routinely important to emotion, but they are neither necessary nor sufficient for emotion. (rrenstevens.com)
  • Why the amygdala is not really the home of fear, emotion, or irrationality, and what understanding this really means for us. (libsyn.com)
  • Our findings indicate that by at least 6-7 years, children experience the same sorts of counterfactual emotions as adults in risky decision making tasks, and also suggest that such emotions are best measured by asking children to make comparative emotion judgments. (qub.ac.uk)
  • And yet when scientists observe infants in situations that should evoke emotion, the infants do not make the expected expressions. (rrenstevens.com)
  • The situations that make us cry are often the ones we remember most. (scienceline.org)
  • Your familiar emotion concepts are built-in only because you grew up in a particular social context where those emotion concepts are meaningful and useful, and your brain applies them outside your awareness to construct your experiences. (dericbownds.net)
  • Following the growing critique of the use of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder in post-disaster interventions, a new type of intervention aimed at building resilience in the face of traumatic events has been making its first steps in the social field. (huji.ac.il)
  • the Hadza are semi-nomadic hunters and gatherers who live in tight-knit social units and collect wild foods for a large portion of their diet, making them a particularly relevant population for testing evolutionary hypotheses about emotion. (nature.com)
  • This post continues with clips, paraphrase, and editing of Barrett's book " How Emotions Are Made: The Secret Life of the Brain " - material from chapter 2, and very briefly noted, Chapter 3. (dericbownds.net)
  • It also holds a key to unlocking the mystery of how the brain creates emotions. (dericbownds.net)
  • Your brain uses your past experiences to construct a hypothesis-the simulation-and compares it to the cacophony arriving from your senses. (dericbownds.net)
  • The theory of constructed emotion, in contrast, tells a story that doesn't match your daily life-your brain invisibly constructs everything you experience, including emotions. (dericbownds.net)
  • They point instead to the idea that the brain must have multiple ways of creating fear, and therefore the emotion category "Fear" cannot be necessarily localized to a specific region. (rrenstevens.com)
  • Simulation helps us understand how the brain creates emotions. (lifeasalifestyle.com)
  • We compared two methods of measuring regret and relief based on children's reported emotion on discovering the outcome of the alternative gamble, one in which children judged whether they now felt the same, happier, or sadder on seeing the other prize and one in which children made emotion ratings on a 7-point scale after the other prize was revealed. (qub.ac.uk)
  • On both these methods, we found that 6- to 7-year-olds' and 8- to 9-year-olds' emotions varied appropriately depending on whether the alternative outcome was better or worse than the prize they had actually obtained, although the former method was more sensitive. (qub.ac.uk)
  • abstract = "Emotions and sentiments are central to explanations of how actual living democracies work, that is, the sustaining and reconfiguring of practices, relations and common-senses that constitute them. (edu.au)
  • I can experimentally validate that I'm getting strong emotions from the players even using a highly abstract game board. (lostgarden.com)
  • Experiments from the last decade have called this particular evolutionary hypothesis into doubt by studying emotion perception in a wider sample of small-scale societies with discovery-based research methods. (nature.com)
  • Across two studies, we found little evidence of universal emotion perception. (nature.com)
  • While studies in anthropology and political science have shed light on the ways that voters are recruited by and experience the passionate and sensuous elements of elections, and democracies more broadly, the emotions of candidates and the politicians they become have largely escaped scrutiny. (edu.au)
  • Another core idea is that the emotions you experience and perceive are not an inevitable consequence of your genes. (dericbownds.net)
  • Sign language requires you to be present, making each interaction a full-bodied experience. (enotalone.com)
  • You can create an emotional, deeply meaningful experience simply by using the fundamentals of system design. (lostgarden.com)
  • Like many aspects of human cognition, multiple inputs are necessary to create the final refined experience. (lostgarden.com)
  • the authors unpack the experience construct into its core constituent elements, namely, emotions. (buas.nl)
  • Limitations of current methods for measuring experiences are discussed, after which biometric and neuroscientific methods are reviewed that are optimally geared toward measuring emotions, as they occur during an experience with fine temporal detail. (buas.nl)
  • The proposed research methodologies allow companies to get a more fine-grained image of what impacts customers over the course of their experience and to actively integrate the use of emotions into creating experiences, as emotions are key to making them memorable. (buas.nl)
  • As a designer, how do I push the conditions that elicit a general class of emotion so that I can dial in the emotional variant that I desire? (lostgarden.com)
  • Medication intended to reduce a sense of sadness, Opbroek found, did so but at the cost of "emotional blunting," or the same flattening of emotion felt by some depressed patients. (scienceline.org)
  • Design/methodology/approach: The paper reviews insights from psychology and cognitive neuroscience that define experiences as a fine-grained temporal succession of emotions that occur during an experiential episode. (buas.nl)
  • Today I'll be talking with Dr. Lisa Feldman Barrett, an NIH award winning researcher and a university distinguished professor of psychology at Northeastern University about her new book, How Emotions are Made. (libsyn.com)
  • Your face, your hands, and your body language contribute to the message, making every 'I love you' more potent, every apology more sincere, and every intimate moment more intense. (enotalone.com)
  • Yet as I played the game and watched other play, I realized that it evoked an intense spectrum of emotions. (lostgarden.com)
  • In Triple Town, I was influenced by the two factor theory of emotion and the somatic marker theory. (lostgarden.com)
  • The Theory of Constructed Emotion says that emotions are learned concepts. (rrenstevens.com)
  • The theory (which the book argues for) says that emotions are real, but not in the objective sense that molecules or neurons are real. (rrenstevens.com)
  • 4. We need a new theory of what emotions are and where they come from. (lifeasalifestyle.com)
  • Scientists have studied other emotion categories in lesion patients besides fear, and the results have been similarly variable. (rrenstevens.com)
  • Practical implications: Companies are constantly seeking to create memorable experiences for their customers. (buas.nl)
  • Originality/value: The paper sketches the contours of a rapidly emerging framework that unpacks memorable experiences into their constituent element - emotions. (buas.nl)
  • While someone with FD experiences emotions like anyone else, they're born without the reflex necessary to produce tears: crying becomes a dry display, according to the foundation's website . (scienceline.org)
  • The ways candidates feel, and in the process make democracy, illuminate unrecognised factors in the shaping of the political. (edu.au)
  • Your goal is to connect with customers, so when you can make a customer feel like they are getting products and services at a price that's too good to be true, you're one more step ahead of the game. (diymarketers.com)
  • The inability to feel physical pain is another genetic anomaly that can make a person less likely to cry. (scienceline.org)
  • With an underdeveloped system of nerves for sensing injury, people with Congenital Insensitivity to Pain with Anhidrosis ( CIPA ) have a pain threshold high enough to make a bike accident feel more like a pillow fight, and so tears flow less often. (scienceline.org)
  • Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT), an adaptation which includes elements of cognitive therapy, was created in the early 2000's as a treatment for depression (3). (researchsquare.com)
  • According to a review article published this year in the journal Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica , severe cases of depression flatten emotions, leaving a person without the trigger that starts the crying circuit. (scienceline.org)
  • Max Hamilton, who created a depression scale in 1960, commented in a 1967 paper that severely depressed patients "go beyond weeping" and settle into a cry-proof state. (scienceline.org)
  • Every business must create an irresistible offer - but few do. (diymarketers.com)
  • Each description contained an emotion word corresponding to the category he believed was being expressed (e.g. (nature.com)
  • Creating irresistible offers is an important part of any marketing strategy . (diymarketers.com)
  • It is a vital step in the process of how to make a movie and a cornerstone in understanding how movies are made. (artincontext.org)
  • I include a small section at the end of this essay on the OCC emotion model that fits nicely with my process. (lostgarden.com)
  • A constructionist approach to emotion has a couple of core ideas. (dericbownds.net)
  • The collaboration between Les Twins and Hennessy Very Special distils the brand's eclectic, globe-trotting approach to cognac-making, one that culminated after the duo visited Cognac. (hennessy.com)
  • I'm reading How Emotions Are Made by Lisa Feldman Barrett and it's the first time in quite awhile I've been so enthralled with a book that I've been taking lots of notes, not just underlining things. (lifeasalifestyle.com)
  • Human beings also have attributes of mind, emotion, and will because we were created by Him in His image (Gen 1:26). (tasc-creationscience.org)
  • The reason we wanted to collaborate with Hennessy is because there's an incredible story behind it, something real, built on genuine savoir-faire. (hennessy.com)
  • We knew that Hennessy is luxurious, but when we set foot there and understood the story behind it, and all the steps that go into making Hennessy cognac, we said to ourselves that everyone should know more about it. (hennessy.com)
  • Maybe there's only one person or place who can make you cry again. (scienceline.org)
  • Although a number of studies have examined the developmental emergence of counterfactual emotions of regret and relief, none of these have used tasks that resemble those used with adolescents and adults, which typically involve risky decision making. (qub.ac.uk)
  • A flow of tears not only shoots up the level of endorphins, natural chemicals within the body, providing a sense of well-being and relieving stress, but also they release toxins - making us healthier, according to Dr. William Frey II , a neurologist at the University of Minnesota. (scienceline.org)
  • If you've ever wondered how emotions work, and what it means for all of us, then do we have the how emotions are made show for you. (libsyn.com)
  • The art of creating Hennessy Very Special reveals surprising parallels with the world of dance. (hennessy.com)
  • Triple Town helped solidify how I construct the world and setting in my games. (lostgarden.com)
  • What in the world is the political flu and what does it have to do with our emotions? (libsyn.com)
  • They simply expand on"the wha" that the feature makes possible for the user. (diymarketers.com)
  • it is about weaving a tapestry of emotions, characters, and dialogue that will resonate with audiences. (artincontext.org)
  • One of the most surprising things I learned as I began to study neuroscience: a mental event, such as fear, is not created by only one set of neurons. (rrenstevens.com)
  • In this article, I'm going to show you one of my favorite methods to create an irresistible offer. (diymarketers.com)
  • Darwin first asked informants to provide their own emotion labels for photographs of the facial configurations in question. (nature.com)