Description
Book SynopsisIn Volume 2 of the series, the editors and contributors examine the interactive influences of personality, cognition, and emotion in order to attain a comprehensive understanding of human behavior.
Trade Review
'[S]ets the bar very high in seeking to integrate domains that are divergent, not only in terms of their content . . . but also in terms of their preferred methodologies, which frequently appear to be antithetical . . . . Although the lofty aim of integration is ultimately unrealized, at the end of the book the reader is left with a newfound impression that it is, quite possibly, realizable.' (K. V. Petrides, Personality and Individual Differences)
Table of Contents
Introduction: Relations Among Personality, Cognition, and Emotion
I. DIFFERENTIAL APPROACHES TO THE STUDY OF COGNITIVE AND AFFECTIVE PROCESSES
Anxiety and Cognitive Performance, Michael W. Eysenck
The Energetics of Emotional Intelligence, Gerald Matthews andAngela N. Fellner
The Impact of Aging on Information Integration in Reasoning and Decision Making, Szymon Wichary, Ewa Domaradzka, and Grzegorz Sedek
Building Bridges in Psychology as Exemplified by Creative Intuition, Alina Kola?czyk
II. SELF IN SOCIAL BEHAVIOR AND EMOTIONAL EXPRESSION
How Emotions Work, Nico H. Frijda
Emotions in the Individual Mind, in Relationships, and in Reading Fiction, Keith Oatley
Agency and Communion as Basic Dimensions of Social Cognition, Bogdan Wojciszke
Emotions and Morality: You Don’t Have to Feel Really Bad to be Good, June Price Tangney, Elizabeth Malouf, Jeff Stuewig and Debra Mashek
III. EPILOGUE: TOWARD A COMMON PARADIGM
Integrating Personality, Cognition, and Emotion: Seeing More Than the Dots, Wiliam Revelle
Name Index
Subject Index