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Emotion, Development, and Self-Organization: Dynamic Systems Approaches to Emotional Development.

Allan Abbass
- Vol. 13, Iss: 2, pp 45-45
TLDR
In this article, the authors present a rich volume encompassing emotion theory and research with integration to clinical practice with heavy emphasis on emotion theory, including dynamic systems theory, non-linear dynamic, state space, chaos theory and variants of self-organization.
Abstract
Lewis, Granic and the several chapter authors have produced a rich volume encompassing emotion theory and research with integration to clinical practice. The book begins with a necessary introduction which defines several key terms one must grasp in order to follow the book with its heavy emphasis on emotion theory. These definitions include dynamic systems theory, non-linear dynamic, state space, chaos theory and variants of self-organization. The book is otherwise broken into 3 major sections. Intrapersonal processes focuses on internal working emotional systems and their development. Neurobiological processes focuses on the neurobiological equivalents of emotion and emotion development. Interpersonal processes elaborate, in detail, on the role of parent-child relationships, attachment, interpersonal dynamics and the role of marital relationships as a model. The various chapters take an in depth look at both recent and some more classical research findings. This is interwoven with new thinking of some of the brightest minds in this field today, The chapter on Marital Modelling for example blends theory to this (Washington University) group’s own research, to practical assessment and therapeutic instruments. To whet the theorist/researcher’s appetite, the chapter goes into a mathematical model describing the marital dyad. Finally, it concludes with eight hypotheses that this group is studying toward the development of an empirically based marital intervention. Such a chapter is bound to stir up other researchers’ competitive and collaborative instincts, resulting in the provocation of both thought and emotion. This book is definitely dense, and, despite its relative brevity, it is geared primarily for a subgroup of research based professionals and interested others. Regardless of this challenge, it is well worth the read as much more than a primer on this evolving and cutting-edge research and clinical area.

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Citations
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Distinct pathways of neural coupling for different basic emotions.

TL;DR: The results of the effective connectivity analysis indicate that the amygdala is involved in distinct functional integration effects with cortical networks processing sensorimotor, somatosensory, or cognitive aspects of basic emotions.
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Self–other contingencies: Enacting social perception

TL;DR: In this paper, social perception is defined as a skill, an ability to work successfully within the set of regularities, or contingencies that characterize a given domain, and social perception should be a social skill.
Journal ArticleDOI

Self-organizing individual differences in brain development

TL;DR: This article reviews mechanisms of neural change in real time and over development, and it is argued that change at each of these time scales embodies principles of self-organizing systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

A theory and dynamic model of dyadic interaction: Concerns, appraisals, and contagiousness in a developmental context

TL;DR: In this article, a theory of dyadic interaction is presented, based on the concepts of "concern" (i.e., intentions, goals, and interests), "appraisal", and "contagiousness".
Journal ArticleDOI

From affect programs to dynamical discrete emotions

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that to conceive of discrete emotions as self-organizing and softly assembled patterns of various processes accounts more naturally than traditional discrete emotion theory for the variability and context-sensitivity of emotions.
References
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