Description

Book Synopsis

Emotions are an inescapable part of the human experience. They motivate actions and reactions, guide our interpersonal and business relationships, inspire political and societal trends, and influence our sense of self and well-being. Emphasizing the broad practical reach of this field of study, Understanding Emotions draws from neuroscience, psychiatry, biology, genetics, the humanities, economics, and more to provide a strong foundation in core concepts. An easy-to-follow narrative arc encompasses the entire life span, while representative studies provide immediate insight into the real-world implications of important findings.

This new Fourth Edition continues to provide clear and concise guidance toward the factors that drive emotion, with new, revised, and expanded discussions that reflect the current state of the field. Detailed coverage of social and anti-social motivations, moral judgment, empathy, psychological disorders, the physiological components of emotion

Table of Contents

Figures xvii

Tables xxv

Preface xxvii

Acknowledgments xxxi

Part I Perspectives on Emotions 1

1 Approaches to Understanding Emotions 3

Introduction 4

What is an Emotion? First Ideas 5

Nineteenth-Century Founders 6

Charles Darwin: The Evolutionary Approach 6

William James: The Bodily Approach 10

Sigmund Freud: The Psychoanalytic Approach 10

Philosophical and Literary Approaches 12

Aristotle and the Ethics of Emotions 12

René Descartes: Philosophically Speaking 15

George Eliot: The World of the Arts 17

Brain Science, Psychology, Sociology, and Anthropology 18

John Harlow, Tania Singer: Toward a Brain Science of Emotion 19

Magda Arnold, Sylvan Tomkins: New Psychological Theories 22

Erving Goffman, Arlie Russell Hochschild, and Lila Abu-Lughod: Emotions as Moral Dramas Involving Selves and Others 24

Empirical Inspirations for a New Science of Emotion 26

What is an Emotion? A Framework 28

The Emotional Realm: Emotions—Moods—Dispositions 29

Episodes of Emotion 30

Moods and Sentiments 30

Emotional Disorders 30

Personality and Temperament 30

Summary 31

To Think About and Discuss 31

Further Reading 31

2 Evolution of Emotions 32

Elements of an Evolutionary Approach 33

Selection Pressures 33

Adaptation 35

Natural Design for Gene Replication 37

An Evolutionary History of Human Emotions 41

Insights from Modern Hunter-Gatherers 41

Insights from Nonhuman Primates 43

Human Ancestry 47

Evolution of Symbolic Representation and Language 49

Emotions as Bases of Human Relationships 51

Emotions That Promote Attachment 52

Emotions and Negotiation of Social Hierarchy 54

Emotions, Affiliation, and Friendship 54

Collective Emotion and Preference for In-Groups 55

Summary 57

To Think About and Discuss 57

Further Reading 58

3 Cultural Understandings of Emotions 59

An Island Society 60

Two Emotional Events 60

Three Principles: Emotions as Interpersonal, Active, and Value-based 61

Cross-cultural Approaches to Emotion 62

Identity 62

Independent and Interdependent Selves 63

Knowledge Structures 65

Values 67

The Construction of Emotions in the West 69

The Coming of Civilization to Medieval Societies 69

Has Violence Declined Over Time? 71

The Romantic Era 73

Sexual Love in the West 75

Falling in Love: Emotion as a Role 75

Women and Men: Different Cultures? 78

Integrating Evolutionary and Cultural Approaches 78

Summary 80

To Think About and Discuss 81

Further Reading 81

Part II Elements of Emotions 83

4 Communication of Emotions 85

Five Kinds of Nonverbal Behavior 88

Facial Expressions of Emotion 91

Darwin’s Observations and Theoretical Analysis 91

Early Evidence of the Universality of Facial Expressions of Emotion 93

Critiques of the Ekman and Friesen Studies 95

Discovering New Facial Expressions of Emotion 96

Inference and Context in Emotion Recognition 99

Vocal Communication of Emotion 102

The Communication of Emotions with the Voice 104

Tactile Communication of Emotion 107

Four Functions of Touch 107

Communicating Emotions with Touch 108

Emotional Expression and the Coordination of Social Interaction 109

Cultural Variation in Emotional Expression 111

Cultural Variation in Expressive Behavior 111

Cultural Variation in the Interpretation of Emotional Expression 112

Communication of Emotion in Art 113

Four Hypotheses from the Idea of Romanticism 114

Aesthetic Emotions in the Natyasastra 115

Summary 117

To Think About and Discuss 118

Further Reading 118

5 Bodily Changes and Emotions 119

Early Theorizing About Emotion and Bodily Changes 120

Emotion and the Autonomic Nervous System 122

Directed Facial Action and Physiological Differentiation of Negative Emotion 123

Autonomic Response and Positive Emotion 125

Vagal Tone and Compassion 126

The Blush 126

The Chills 128

Emotion and the Neuroendocrine System 130

The Hypothalamic–Pituitary–Adrenal Axis 130

Emotion and the Immune System 132

The Inflammation Response 132

Bodily Changes and Emotional Experience 134

Representations of Emotions in the Body 135

Interoception 137

Embodiment, Cognition, and Social Interaction 138

Gut Feelings and Decision Making 140

Embodied Empathy 141

Summary 142

To Think About and Discuss 142

Further Reading 142

6 Appraisal, Experience, Regulation 143

Appraisal and Emotion 144

Historical Background and Concepts 144

Primary Appraisals, Good and Bad 145

Which is Stronger, Good or Bad? 147

Secondary Appraisals 148

Discrete Approaches 148

Dimensional Approaches 149

Extending Appraisal Research: Tests of Theories and Patterns of Variation 152

A Third Phase of Appraisal: Verbal Sharing 154

Words and Concepts 155

The Emotion Lexicon 155

Conceptualization of Emotion 156

Emotion Metaphors 156

Prototypes 157

Variations in Emotion Lexicon 158

Emotional Experience 160

The Perspective That Emotions are Discrete 161

The Perspective That Emotions are Constructed 162

Comparing Perspectives 163

Regulation of Emotions 164

Distraction, Reappraisal, Suppression 165

Summary 168

To Think About and Discuss 168

Further Reading 168

7 Brain Mechanisms and Emotion 169

Historical Approaches to the Neuroscience of Emotion 170

Early Research on Brain Lesions and Stimulation 174

The Limbic System 174

Emotion Systems in the Mammalian Brain 175

A Framework from Affective Neuroscience 177

Emotion-Related Appraisals and Subcortical Processes in the Brain 177

Appraisals of Novelty and Concern Relevance: The Amygdala 178

Appraisals of Possible Rewards: The Nucleus Accumbens 180

Appraisals of Pain, Threat, and Harm: The Periaqueductal Gray 182

Bodily Awareness and Subjective Feeling: The Anterior Insular Cortex 183

From Conceptualization to Empathic Understanding: Cortical Processes in the Brain 184

Learning Associations Between Events and Rewards: The Orbitofrontal Cortex 184

Emotion Conceptualization: The Prefrontal Cortex 185

Emotion Regulation: Regions of the Prefrontal Cortex 188

Empathy and the Cortex 189

Social Pain and the Dorsal Anterior Cingulate Cortex and Anterior Insular Cortex 190

The Search for Emotion-Specific Patterns of Brain Activation 192

Distinct Emotions are Constructed in the Cortex 192

Emotions Engage Discrete Patterns of Brain Activation 192

Summary 195

To Think About and Discuss 195

Further Reading 195

Part III Emotions and Social Life 197

8 Development of Emotions in Childhood 199

Theories of Emotional Development 201

Emotional Expression 202

The Developmental Emergence of Emotions 202

Social Emotions: 18 Months and Beyond 206

Developments in Language and the Understanding of Other Minds 209

Recognition of Emotions 210

Facial Expressions 211

Vocal Expressions 213

Postures and Gestures 213

Multimodal Recognition of Emotions 214

Brain Mechanisms in Infants’ Recognition of Emotions 216

The Negativity Bias 216

Regulation of Emotions 218

Regulatory Processes 219

Neurobiological Development of Emotion Regulation 220

Temperament 222

Biological Contributions to Temperament 224

Summary 227

To Think About and Discuss 227

Further Reading 227

9 Emotions in Social Relationships 228

Emotions Within Intimate Relationships 230

Principles of Sexual Love 231

Emotions in Marriage 234

Emotions in Friendships 237

Gratitude 238

Emotional Mimicry 239

Social Support 240

Emotions in Hierarchical Relationships 241

Emotional Displays and the Negotiation of Social Rank 242

Power and Emotion 244

Social Class and Emotion 245

Emotion and Group Dynamics 247

Group and Collective Emotions 248

Group and Collective Emotion and Between-Group Conflict 250

Infrahumanization 251

Emotional Processes That Improve Group Relations 251

Emotional Intelligence 252

Summary 252

To Think About and Discuss 253

Further Reading 253

10 Emotions and Thinking 254

Passion and Reason 255

Emotions Prioritize Thoughts, Goals, and Actions 256

Emotion and Mood in Economic Behavior 259

The Ultimatum Game 259

Classical Economics 259

Affect Infusion, and Affect as Information 260

Styles of Processing 263

Effects of Moods and Emotions on Cognitive Functioning 264

Perceptual Effects 264

Attentional Effects 265

Effects on Remembering 266

Emotion-Related Biases in Memory 267

Eyewitness Testimony 268

Persuasion 269

Morality 269

Intuitions and Principles 269

Cooperation 272

Emotions and the Law 273

Obligations of Society 273

Dispassionate Judgments? 274

Summary 275

To Think About and Discuss 276

Further Reading 276

Part IV Emotions and the Individual 277

11 Individual Differences in Emotionality 279

Emotionality Over the Life Span 280

Continuities in Emotionality from Childhood to Adulthood 280

From Temperament to Personality 282

Individual Differences in Emotion Shape How We Construe the World 283

Age-Related Changes in Temperament and Personality 284

Propensities in Emotionality That Shape the Relational Environment 285

Emotionality Moderates Environmental Risk 286

Attachment and Emotionality 287

What is Attachment? 287

Attachment Status and Emotional Outcomes 288

Parental Sensitivity and Shared Thinking 289

From Parent Attachment to Child Attachment 290

The Role of Environmental Risk in Children’s Attachment Relationships 291

Genetic Influences on Attachment 291

Parental Behaviors Beyond Attachment 292

Biobehavioral Synchronization 292

Parental Mentalization and Reflective Capacity 292

Talk About Emotions 293

Parental Socialization of Emotion 295

Beyond Parenting: Influences of Siblings, Peers, and the Broader Social Context 299

Siblings 300

Peers 301

Broader Social Context 302

Programs That Optimize Emotional Development 303

Summary 306

To Think About and Discuss 307

Further Reading 307

12 Psychopathology of Emotions in Childhood 308

Emotions and Psychopathology 309

The Case of Peter 309

Conceptualizing Childhood Disorders: Categories versus Dimensions 309

How are Emotions Involved in Children’s Psychopathology? 310

Are Emotions Abnormal in Psychopathology? 311

Prevalence of Psychopathology in Childhood 312

Internalizing and Externalizing Psychopathology 312

Comorbidity, Heterogeneity, and the "p" Factor 313

The Relationship Between Risk Factors and Psychopathology 314

People, Contexts, and the Multilevel Environment 314

Risk and Resilience: The Combination of Risk and Protective Factors 315

Risk Factors 318

Biological Risk Factors 318

Proximal Risk Factors 322

Distal Risk Factors 326

Trajectories of Disorders 328

Homotypic and Heterotypic Continuity 329

Trajectories of Externalizing Problems 329

Trajectories of Internalizing Disorders 331

Interventions for Child and Adolescent Psychopathology 332

Summary 335

To Think About and Discuss 335

Further Reading 336

13 Emotional Disorders in Adulthood 337

Depression and Anxiety 338

Psychiatric Disorders: Symptoms and Prevalence 338

Psychiatric Epidemiology 338

Kinds of Depression and Anxiety 340

How Disorders are Caused 343

Genetics 343

Environment 344

Life Events and Difficulties 346

Gene–Environment Interactions 349

Emotional Predispositions and Emotional Disorders 350

Vulnerability Factors 353

Social Support 353

Early Experience 353

Recurrence, Recovery, and Prolongation of Disorders 354

Recurrence 355

Recovery and Fresh Starts 356

Prolongation 356

Cognitive Biases in Anxiety and Other Emotional Disorders 357

Neurophysiology of Depression and Anxiety 358

Antidepressant Drugs 359

Beyond Depression and Anxiety 360

Psychopathic People in Society 360

Schizophrenia, Emotion, Expressed Emotion in Relatives 361

Psychosomatic Effects 362

Summary 363

To Think About and Discuss 363

Further Reading 363

14 A Meaningful Life 364

A Significant Event 365

Meaning in Life 365

Cooperation 366

Happiness 366

Relatedness 368

Satisfaction 369

Well-Being 370

Psychological Therapy with Others and by Oneself 372

Psychoanalysis: Unconscious Schemas of Relating 374

Rogerian Counseling: Empathetic Support 376

Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy: Changing Emotional Life by Thought 376

Emotion-Focused Therapy: Changing Emotional Life by Emotions 377

Outcomes of Psychotherapy 378

Psychotherapy Without Therapists 381

Mindfulness, Ancient and Modern 382

Consciously Making Sense of Emotions 384

Emotions in Literature 386

Emotion and Free Will 387

Emotion and Meaning in the Social World 389

Summary 390

To Think About and Discuss 390

Further Reading 390

References 391

Author Index 485

Subject Index 501

Understanding Emotions EMEA Edition

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Order before 4pm today for delivery by Tue 23 Dec 2025.

A Paperback / softback by Dacher Keltner, Keith Oatley, Jennifer M. Jenkins

15 in stock


    View other formats and editions of Understanding Emotions EMEA Edition by Dacher Keltner

    Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
    Publication Date: 11/10/2019
    ISBN13: 9781119657583, 978-1119657583
    ISBN10: 111965758X

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    Emotions are an inescapable part of the human experience. They motivate actions and reactions, guide our interpersonal and business relationships, inspire political and societal trends, and influence our sense of self and well-being. Emphasizing the broad practical reach of this field of study, Understanding Emotions draws from neuroscience, psychiatry, biology, genetics, the humanities, economics, and more to provide a strong foundation in core concepts. An easy-to-follow narrative arc encompasses the entire life span, while representative studies provide immediate insight into the real-world implications of important findings.

    This new Fourth Edition continues to provide clear and concise guidance toward the factors that drive emotion, with new, revised, and expanded discussions that reflect the current state of the field. Detailed coverage of social and anti-social motivations, moral judgment, empathy, psychological disorders, the physiological components of emotion

    Table of Contents

    Figures xvii

    Tables xxv

    Preface xxvii

    Acknowledgments xxxi

    Part I Perspectives on Emotions 1

    1 Approaches to Understanding Emotions 3

    Introduction 4

    What is an Emotion? First Ideas 5

    Nineteenth-Century Founders 6

    Charles Darwin: The Evolutionary Approach 6

    William James: The Bodily Approach 10

    Sigmund Freud: The Psychoanalytic Approach 10

    Philosophical and Literary Approaches 12

    Aristotle and the Ethics of Emotions 12

    René Descartes: Philosophically Speaking 15

    George Eliot: The World of the Arts 17

    Brain Science, Psychology, Sociology, and Anthropology 18

    John Harlow, Tania Singer: Toward a Brain Science of Emotion 19

    Magda Arnold, Sylvan Tomkins: New Psychological Theories 22

    Erving Goffman, Arlie Russell Hochschild, and Lila Abu-Lughod: Emotions as Moral Dramas Involving Selves and Others 24

    Empirical Inspirations for a New Science of Emotion 26

    What is an Emotion? A Framework 28

    The Emotional Realm: Emotions—Moods—Dispositions 29

    Episodes of Emotion 30

    Moods and Sentiments 30

    Emotional Disorders 30

    Personality and Temperament 30

    Summary 31

    To Think About and Discuss 31

    Further Reading 31

    2 Evolution of Emotions 32

    Elements of an Evolutionary Approach 33

    Selection Pressures 33

    Adaptation 35

    Natural Design for Gene Replication 37

    An Evolutionary History of Human Emotions 41

    Insights from Modern Hunter-Gatherers 41

    Insights from Nonhuman Primates 43

    Human Ancestry 47

    Evolution of Symbolic Representation and Language 49

    Emotions as Bases of Human Relationships 51

    Emotions That Promote Attachment 52

    Emotions and Negotiation of Social Hierarchy 54

    Emotions, Affiliation, and Friendship 54

    Collective Emotion and Preference for In-Groups 55

    Summary 57

    To Think About and Discuss 57

    Further Reading 58

    3 Cultural Understandings of Emotions 59

    An Island Society 60

    Two Emotional Events 60

    Three Principles: Emotions as Interpersonal, Active, and Value-based 61

    Cross-cultural Approaches to Emotion 62

    Identity 62

    Independent and Interdependent Selves 63

    Knowledge Structures 65

    Values 67

    The Construction of Emotions in the West 69

    The Coming of Civilization to Medieval Societies 69

    Has Violence Declined Over Time? 71

    The Romantic Era 73

    Sexual Love in the West 75

    Falling in Love: Emotion as a Role 75

    Women and Men: Different Cultures? 78

    Integrating Evolutionary and Cultural Approaches 78

    Summary 80

    To Think About and Discuss 81

    Further Reading 81

    Part II Elements of Emotions 83

    4 Communication of Emotions 85

    Five Kinds of Nonverbal Behavior 88

    Facial Expressions of Emotion 91

    Darwin’s Observations and Theoretical Analysis 91

    Early Evidence of the Universality of Facial Expressions of Emotion 93

    Critiques of the Ekman and Friesen Studies 95

    Discovering New Facial Expressions of Emotion 96

    Inference and Context in Emotion Recognition 99

    Vocal Communication of Emotion 102

    The Communication of Emotions with the Voice 104

    Tactile Communication of Emotion 107

    Four Functions of Touch 107

    Communicating Emotions with Touch 108

    Emotional Expression and the Coordination of Social Interaction 109

    Cultural Variation in Emotional Expression 111

    Cultural Variation in Expressive Behavior 111

    Cultural Variation in the Interpretation of Emotional Expression 112

    Communication of Emotion in Art 113

    Four Hypotheses from the Idea of Romanticism 114

    Aesthetic Emotions in the Natyasastra 115

    Summary 117

    To Think About and Discuss 118

    Further Reading 118

    5 Bodily Changes and Emotions 119

    Early Theorizing About Emotion and Bodily Changes 120

    Emotion and the Autonomic Nervous System 122

    Directed Facial Action and Physiological Differentiation of Negative Emotion 123

    Autonomic Response and Positive Emotion 125

    Vagal Tone and Compassion 126

    The Blush 126

    The Chills 128

    Emotion and the Neuroendocrine System 130

    The Hypothalamic–Pituitary–Adrenal Axis 130

    Emotion and the Immune System 132

    The Inflammation Response 132

    Bodily Changes and Emotional Experience 134

    Representations of Emotions in the Body 135

    Interoception 137

    Embodiment, Cognition, and Social Interaction 138

    Gut Feelings and Decision Making 140

    Embodied Empathy 141

    Summary 142

    To Think About and Discuss 142

    Further Reading 142

    6 Appraisal, Experience, Regulation 143

    Appraisal and Emotion 144

    Historical Background and Concepts 144

    Primary Appraisals, Good and Bad 145

    Which is Stronger, Good or Bad? 147

    Secondary Appraisals 148

    Discrete Approaches 148

    Dimensional Approaches 149

    Extending Appraisal Research: Tests of Theories and Patterns of Variation 152

    A Third Phase of Appraisal: Verbal Sharing 154

    Words and Concepts 155

    The Emotion Lexicon 155

    Conceptualization of Emotion 156

    Emotion Metaphors 156

    Prototypes 157

    Variations in Emotion Lexicon 158

    Emotional Experience 160

    The Perspective That Emotions are Discrete 161

    The Perspective That Emotions are Constructed 162

    Comparing Perspectives 163

    Regulation of Emotions 164

    Distraction, Reappraisal, Suppression 165

    Summary 168

    To Think About and Discuss 168

    Further Reading 168

    7 Brain Mechanisms and Emotion 169

    Historical Approaches to the Neuroscience of Emotion 170

    Early Research on Brain Lesions and Stimulation 174

    The Limbic System 174

    Emotion Systems in the Mammalian Brain 175

    A Framework from Affective Neuroscience 177

    Emotion-Related Appraisals and Subcortical Processes in the Brain 177

    Appraisals of Novelty and Concern Relevance: The Amygdala 178

    Appraisals of Possible Rewards: The Nucleus Accumbens 180

    Appraisals of Pain, Threat, and Harm: The Periaqueductal Gray 182

    Bodily Awareness and Subjective Feeling: The Anterior Insular Cortex 183

    From Conceptualization to Empathic Understanding: Cortical Processes in the Brain 184

    Learning Associations Between Events and Rewards: The Orbitofrontal Cortex 184

    Emotion Conceptualization: The Prefrontal Cortex 185

    Emotion Regulation: Regions of the Prefrontal Cortex 188

    Empathy and the Cortex 189

    Social Pain and the Dorsal Anterior Cingulate Cortex and Anterior Insular Cortex 190

    The Search for Emotion-Specific Patterns of Brain Activation 192

    Distinct Emotions are Constructed in the Cortex 192

    Emotions Engage Discrete Patterns of Brain Activation 192

    Summary 195

    To Think About and Discuss 195

    Further Reading 195

    Part III Emotions and Social Life 197

    8 Development of Emotions in Childhood 199

    Theories of Emotional Development 201

    Emotional Expression 202

    The Developmental Emergence of Emotions 202

    Social Emotions: 18 Months and Beyond 206

    Developments in Language and the Understanding of Other Minds 209

    Recognition of Emotions 210

    Facial Expressions 211

    Vocal Expressions 213

    Postures and Gestures 213

    Multimodal Recognition of Emotions 214

    Brain Mechanisms in Infants’ Recognition of Emotions 216

    The Negativity Bias 216

    Regulation of Emotions 218

    Regulatory Processes 219

    Neurobiological Development of Emotion Regulation 220

    Temperament 222

    Biological Contributions to Temperament 224

    Summary 227

    To Think About and Discuss 227

    Further Reading 227

    9 Emotions in Social Relationships 228

    Emotions Within Intimate Relationships 230

    Principles of Sexual Love 231

    Emotions in Marriage 234

    Emotions in Friendships 237

    Gratitude 238

    Emotional Mimicry 239

    Social Support 240

    Emotions in Hierarchical Relationships 241

    Emotional Displays and the Negotiation of Social Rank 242

    Power and Emotion 244

    Social Class and Emotion 245

    Emotion and Group Dynamics 247

    Group and Collective Emotions 248

    Group and Collective Emotion and Between-Group Conflict 250

    Infrahumanization 251

    Emotional Processes That Improve Group Relations 251

    Emotional Intelligence 252

    Summary 252

    To Think About and Discuss 253

    Further Reading 253

    10 Emotions and Thinking 254

    Passion and Reason 255

    Emotions Prioritize Thoughts, Goals, and Actions 256

    Emotion and Mood in Economic Behavior 259

    The Ultimatum Game 259

    Classical Economics 259

    Affect Infusion, and Affect as Information 260

    Styles of Processing 263

    Effects of Moods and Emotions on Cognitive Functioning 264

    Perceptual Effects 264

    Attentional Effects 265

    Effects on Remembering 266

    Emotion-Related Biases in Memory 267

    Eyewitness Testimony 268

    Persuasion 269

    Morality 269

    Intuitions and Principles 269

    Cooperation 272

    Emotions and the Law 273

    Obligations of Society 273

    Dispassionate Judgments? 274

    Summary 275

    To Think About and Discuss 276

    Further Reading 276

    Part IV Emotions and the Individual 277

    11 Individual Differences in Emotionality 279

    Emotionality Over the Life Span 280

    Continuities in Emotionality from Childhood to Adulthood 280

    From Temperament to Personality 282

    Individual Differences in Emotion Shape How We Construe the World 283

    Age-Related Changes in Temperament and Personality 284

    Propensities in Emotionality That Shape the Relational Environment 285

    Emotionality Moderates Environmental Risk 286

    Attachment and Emotionality 287

    What is Attachment? 287

    Attachment Status and Emotional Outcomes 288

    Parental Sensitivity and Shared Thinking 289

    From Parent Attachment to Child Attachment 290

    The Role of Environmental Risk in Children’s Attachment Relationships 291

    Genetic Influences on Attachment 291

    Parental Behaviors Beyond Attachment 292

    Biobehavioral Synchronization 292

    Parental Mentalization and Reflective Capacity 292

    Talk About Emotions 293

    Parental Socialization of Emotion 295

    Beyond Parenting: Influences of Siblings, Peers, and the Broader Social Context 299

    Siblings 300

    Peers 301

    Broader Social Context 302

    Programs That Optimize Emotional Development 303

    Summary 306

    To Think About and Discuss 307

    Further Reading 307

    12 Psychopathology of Emotions in Childhood 308

    Emotions and Psychopathology 309

    The Case of Peter 309

    Conceptualizing Childhood Disorders: Categories versus Dimensions 309

    How are Emotions Involved in Children’s Psychopathology? 310

    Are Emotions Abnormal in Psychopathology? 311

    Prevalence of Psychopathology in Childhood 312

    Internalizing and Externalizing Psychopathology 312

    Comorbidity, Heterogeneity, and the "p" Factor 313

    The Relationship Between Risk Factors and Psychopathology 314

    People, Contexts, and the Multilevel Environment 314

    Risk and Resilience: The Combination of Risk and Protective Factors 315

    Risk Factors 318

    Biological Risk Factors 318

    Proximal Risk Factors 322

    Distal Risk Factors 326

    Trajectories of Disorders 328

    Homotypic and Heterotypic Continuity 329

    Trajectories of Externalizing Problems 329

    Trajectories of Internalizing Disorders 331

    Interventions for Child and Adolescent Psychopathology 332

    Summary 335

    To Think About and Discuss 335

    Further Reading 336

    13 Emotional Disorders in Adulthood 337

    Depression and Anxiety 338

    Psychiatric Disorders: Symptoms and Prevalence 338

    Psychiatric Epidemiology 338

    Kinds of Depression and Anxiety 340

    How Disorders are Caused 343

    Genetics 343

    Environment 344

    Life Events and Difficulties 346

    Gene–Environment Interactions 349

    Emotional Predispositions and Emotional Disorders 350

    Vulnerability Factors 353

    Social Support 353

    Early Experience 353

    Recurrence, Recovery, and Prolongation of Disorders 354

    Recurrence 355

    Recovery and Fresh Starts 356

    Prolongation 356

    Cognitive Biases in Anxiety and Other Emotional Disorders 357

    Neurophysiology of Depression and Anxiety 358

    Antidepressant Drugs 359

    Beyond Depression and Anxiety 360

    Psychopathic People in Society 360

    Schizophrenia, Emotion, Expressed Emotion in Relatives 361

    Psychosomatic Effects 362

    Summary 363

    To Think About and Discuss 363

    Further Reading 363

    14 A Meaningful Life 364

    A Significant Event 365

    Meaning in Life 365

    Cooperation 366

    Happiness 366

    Relatedness 368

    Satisfaction 369

    Well-Being 370

    Psychological Therapy with Others and by Oneself 372

    Psychoanalysis: Unconscious Schemas of Relating 374

    Rogerian Counseling: Empathetic Support 376

    Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy: Changing Emotional Life by Thought 376

    Emotion-Focused Therapy: Changing Emotional Life by Emotions 377

    Outcomes of Psychotherapy 378

    Psychotherapy Without Therapists 381

    Mindfulness, Ancient and Modern 382

    Consciously Making Sense of Emotions 384

    Emotions in Literature 386

    Emotion and Free Will 387

    Emotion and Meaning in the Social World 389

    Summary 390

    To Think About and Discuss 390

    Further Reading 390

    References 391

    Author Index 485

    Subject Index 501

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