Cognitive Consequences of Emotion
情绪的认知后果
基本信息
- 批准号:7794988
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 30.62万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:
- 财政年份:1994
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:1994-08-01 至 2012-03-31
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:Adrenergic AgentsAffectAffectiveAmericanAnimalsAnxietyArousalBehaviorBehavioralBiologicalCognitiveCognitive ScienceCollaborationsDelayed MemoryDimensionsEconomicsEmotionalEmotionsEpinephrineEventFeelingGoalsHormonesHumanInvestigationLearningMemoryMental disordersMoodsNaturePainPerformancePersonal SatisfactionPharmaceutical PreparationsPlayPost-Traumatic Stress DisordersProcessProductivityPropranololPsychologistReactionResearchResourcesRoleSemanticsShort-Term MemoryStimulusStressSystemTechniquesTextbooksThinkingTraumaadrenergicbasechronic depressioncostemotional reactionemotional stimulusexperienceimplicit memorylong term memoryresearch studysocial
项目摘要
DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Emotions are embodied registrations of value and urgency. Such registrations occur simultaneously in multiple systems, providing multiple windows on the process. The cognitive consequences of emotion provide one such window. The aim is to learn how the information from the value component of affective reactions (registrations of goodness, badness) direct thinking and other cognitive processes. Research in the prior period of support found that emotion turns on and off many of the textbook phenomena of cognitive psychology. Through collaboration with a cognitive psychologist, proposed research builds on this discovery. In behavioral experiments, we examine emotional influences on human performance on cognitive tasks involving false memories, priming, reasoning, categorization, and implicit learning. To isolate the processes involved, experiments vary moods and emotions and examine cultural influences in cross-cultural studies. A second goal is to learn how the urgency or importance of events (registered as affective reactions of arousal) govern what people remember. Through collaboration with a biological psychologist, proposed research build on research done mostly on animals, concerning how emotional events gain priority in long term memory. We will examine how emotional memories can become indelible by experiments involving emotional stimuli, mild stress tasks, and administration of memory-modulating drugs (e.g., epinephrine, propranolol). The proposed research is thus focused on the two basic components of emotional reactions - valence and arousal. The question is what role does each of these affective dimensions play in how people think and learn and what they remember. Findings to date show that thoughts tinged with affect are compelling and memorable. The proposed research takes the next step to examine the processes by which this occurs, processes that are fundamental to the guidance of everyday thought and behavior as well as to the disabling conditions of mental illness from which many Americans suffer. Understanding affective valence is essential for attacking the conditions of depression and chronic anxiety and the insistent feelings of loss and danger them painful and confusing. This research seeks to open a new window on how the arousal dimension of affect controls what people remember. It will be critical for attacking posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), because these appear to be the processes responsible for the debilitating re-experience of trauma. Such problems know no economic or social boundaries. Reducing their cost in productivity, public resources, and well-being awaits investigation of these cognitive consequences of emotion.
描述(由申请人提供):情感是价值和紧迫性的体现登记。这种注册在多个系统中同时发生,提供了多个过程窗口。情绪的认知后果提供了这样一个窗口。其目的是了解情感反应的价值成分(好,坏的注册)如何指导思维和其他认知过程。前期的研究发现,情绪会开启和关闭认知心理学的许多教科书现象。通过与认知心理学家的合作,拟议的研究建立在这一发现的基础上。在行为实验中,我们研究了情绪对人类认知任务表现的影响,包括错误记忆,启动,推理,分类和内隐学习。为了分离所涉及的过程,实验改变了情绪和情感,并检查了跨文化研究中的文化影响。第二个目标是了解事件的紧迫性或重要性(记录为唤醒的情感反应)如何控制人们的记忆。通过与生物心理学家的合作,拟议的研究建立在主要在动物身上进行的研究基础上,关于情感事件如何在长期记忆中获得优先权。我们将通过涉及情绪刺激、轻度压力任务和记忆调节药物(例如,肾上腺素、普萘洛尔)。因此,拟议的研究集中在情绪反应的两个基本组成部分-效价和唤醒。问题是这些情感维度中的每一个在人们如何思考和学习以及他们记住什么方面发挥了什么作用。迄今为止的研究结果表明,带有情感色彩的想法是令人信服和难忘的。拟议中的研究采取下一步来检查这种情况发生的过程,这些过程对于指导日常思想和行为以及许多美国人遭受的精神疾病的致残条件至关重要。了解情感效价对于治疗抑郁症和慢性焦虑症以及持续的失落感和危险感是必不可少的,它们是痛苦和困惑的。这项研究试图打开一个新的窗口,了解情感的唤醒维度如何控制人们的记忆。这对于治疗创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)至关重要,因为这些似乎是导致创伤再体验的过程。这些问题不分经济或社会界限。降低他们在生产力、公共资源和幸福感方面的成本,有待于对情绪的认知后果进行调查。
项目成果
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