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  1. An argument for basic emotions.Paul Ekman - 1992 - Cognition and Emotion 6 (3):169-200.
    Emotions are viewed as having evolved through their adaptive value in dealing with fundamental life-tasks. Each emotion has unique features: signal, physiology, and antecedent events. Each emotion also has characteristics in common with other emotions: rapid onset, short duration, unbidden occurrence, automatic appraisal, and coherence among responses. These shared and unique characteristics are the product of our evolution, and distinguish emotions from other affective phenomena.
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  • Anxiety and Performance: The Processing Efficiency Theory.Michael W. Eysenck & Manuel G. Calvo - 1992 - Cognition and Emotion 6 (6):409-434.
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  • Trait anxiety, visuospatial processing, and working memory.Michael Eysenck, Susanna Payne & Nazanin Derakshan - 2005 - Cognition and Emotion 19 (8):1214-1228.
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  • Six Views of Embodied Cognition.Margaret Wilson - 2002 - Psychonomic Bulletin and Review 9 (4):625--636.
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  • Empathy: Its ultimate and proximate bases.Stephanie D. Preston & Frans B. M. de Waal - 2001 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 25 (1):1-20.
    There is disagreement in the literature about the exact nature of the phenomenon of empathy. There are emotional, cognitive, and conditioning views, applying in varying degrees across species. An adequate description of the ultimate and proximate mechanism can integrate these views. Proximately, the perception of an object's state activates the subject's corresponding representations, which in turn activate somatic and autonomic responses. This mechanism supports basic behaviors that are crucial for the reproductive success of animals living in groups. The Perception-Action Model, (...)
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  • Embodied simulation: From neurons to phenomenal experience. [REVIEW]Vittorio Gallese - 2005 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 4 (1):23-48.
    The same neural structures involved in the unconscious modeling of our acting body in space also contribute to our awareness of the lived body and of the objects that the world contains. Neuroscientific research also shows that there are neural mechanisms mediating between the multi-level personal experience we entertain of our lived body, and the implicit certainties we simultaneously hold about others. Such personal and body-related experiential knowledge enables us to understand the actions performed by others, and to directly decode (...)
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  • Personality: A Psychological Interpretation.Gordon W. Allport & Milton Harrington - 1938 - International Journal of Ethics 49 (1):105-107.
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  • (1 other version)Experimental Psychology.Robert S. Woodworth - 1940 - Mind 49 (193):63-72.
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  • The embodied nature of spatial perspective taking: Embodied transformation versus sensorimotor interference.Klaus Kessler & Lindsey Anne Thomson - 2010 - Cognition 114 (1):72-88.
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  • Retrieval processes in recognition memory: Effects of associative context.Endel Tulving & Donald M. Thomson - 1971 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 87 (1):116.
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  • What is so special about embodied simulation?Vittorio Gallese & Corrado Sinigaglia - 2011 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 15 (11):512-519.
    Simulation theories of social cognition abound in the literature, but it is often unclear what simulation means and how it works. The discovery of mirror neurons, responding both to action execution and observation, suggested an embodied approach to mental simulation. Over the last years this approach has been hotly debated and alternative accounts have been proposed. We discuss these accounts and argue that they fail to capture the uniqueness of embodied simulation (ES). ES theory provides a unitary account of basic (...)
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  • The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals. [REVIEW]T. Crowley - 1957 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 7:237-237.
    This new edition of Darwin’s work is due, says the introduction, to the interest felt in the new science of kinesics, viz., the non-verbal aspects of human communication. Darwin felt that the genetic approach to the problem should throw light on the emotional expressions to be observed in animals, children, the insane and normal adults and he crystallized his findings in a number of definite laws. More recent attention to these problems however shows the danger of dogmatism in this department. (...)
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  • (1 other version)The expression of the emotions in man and animal.Charles Darwin - 1890 - Mineola, New York: Dover Publications. Edited by Francis Darwin.
    One of science's greatest intellects examines how people and animals display fear, anger, and pleasure. Darwin based this 1872 study on his personal observations, which anticipated later findings in neuroscience. Abounding in anecdotes and literary quotations, the book is illustrated with 21 figures and seven photographic plates. Its direct approach, accessible to professionals and amateurs alike, continues to inspire and inform modern research in psychology.
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  • Basic emotions, relations among emotions, and emotion-cognition relations.Carroll E. Izard - 1992 - Psychological Review 99 (3):561-565.
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  • Mental Images and Their Transformations. [REVIEW]Terence Hines - 1983 - Journal of Mind and Behavior 4 (3).
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  • Motor processes in mental rotation.Mark Wexler, Stephen M. Kosslyn & Alain Berthoz - 1998 - Cognition 68 (1):77-94.
    Much indirect evidence supports the hypothesis that transformations of mental images are at least in part guided by motor processes, even in the case of images of abstract objects rather than of body parts. For example, rotation may be guided by processes that also prime one to see results of a specific motor action. We directly test the hypothesis by means of a dual-task paradigm in which subjects perform the Cooper-Shepard mental rotation task while executing an unseen motor rotation in (...)
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  • The impact of anxiety on analogical reasoning.Jean M. Tohill & Keith J. Holyoak - 2000 - Thinking and Reasoning 6 (1):27 – 40.
    The effect of state anxiety on analogical reasoning was investigated by examining qualitative differences in mapping performance between anxious and non-anxious individuals reasoning about pictorial analogies. The working-memory restriction theory of anxiety, coupled with theories of analogy that link complexity of mapping with working-memory capacity, predicts that high anxiety will impair the ability to find correspondences based on relations between multiple objects relative to correspondences based on overlap of attributes between individual objects. Anxiety was induced in one condition by a (...)
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  • Personality. A Psychological Interpretation. [REVIEW]Ernst Schachtel - 1938 - Zeitschrift für Sozialforschung 7 (1-2):245-245.
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