This is a super synthesis and description of many different theories. How do we learn to have feelings? We learn how to have feelings by labeling them in our own mind. This label is taught much how language defines thought. We really do not know if languages define thought, but we can examine language and compare languages from the culture from which they came. It is important for children to conceptualize emotions. It is valuable for their emotions to be contextualized too. “You need an emotion concept in order to experience or perceive the associated emotion. It’s a requirement. Without a concept for “fear,” you cannot experience fear. Without a concept for “sadness,” you cannot perceive sadness in another person. You could learn the necessary concept, or you could construct it in the moment through conceptual combination, m but your brain must be able to make that concept and predict with it. Otherwise you will be experientially blind to that emotion.” Says Dr. Lisa Feldman Barrett in her book How Emotions are Made the Secret Life of the Brain. We must introduce children to literature that focuses what our emotions are, how we experience them, and why. Then their emotional vocabulary will be extensive and they will be emotionally intelligent adults.
Thanks this helped me understand theories of emotions better, that for me Plutchik is mainly about categorisation, I'm interested in the structure of emotions and their relation to language which also has structural explanations
A different take on the wheel of emotion from 1897 The colors of the rainbow do not begin to reflect all of the infinite hues of reflected light. However, the myriad colors of the world are not separate things, but are in truth admixtures of three primary colors, red, yellow, and blue. This simple conceptual scheme provided the explanation of color that made the replication of color easy, to the delight no doubt of interior decorators the world over. Deriving complex structure from elemental processes serves all the physical and biological sciences, and like the metaphors of disease and space and time, can encapsulate a world view in a phrase. However, feelings or affective states have not been so tractable, though an early psychologist would demur. He was the late 19th century psychologist Wilhelm Wundt, the founder of experimental psychology. Wundt wanted to know the rudiments of felt experience, or affect, and his aim was to see if affect, like color, can be derived from rudimentary components. Wundt believed that the affective components of the human mind could be determined by rigorously objective introspection. That is, he thought that affect or feelings could be broken down (or reduced) to their basic elements without sacrificing any of the properties of the whole. Wundt’s introspection was not a casual affair, but a highly practiced form of self-examination. He trained his students to make observations that were free from the bias of personal interpretation or previous experience, and used the results to develop a theory of affect which derived from three bi-polar dimensions. According to Wundt: “In this manifold of feelings… it is nevertheless possible to distinguish certain different chief directions, including certain affective opposites of predominant character.” Wundt identified three bipolar dimensions whose permutations comprised moment to moment affective states: (i) pleasurable versus un-pleasurable, (ii) arousing versus subduing, and (iii) strain versus relaxation. An attentive reader would note that strain versus relaxation also reflect unpleasant and pleasant affective states, however these states differ from our workaday pleasures and pains because they are continuously rather than intermittently present. So, with this new perspective, Wundt in effect postulated one discrete and two continuous affective dimensions. For example, a delicious meal or touching a hot pan are pleasurable and un-pleasurable states that occur discretely, however the relative activity of the covert musculature is continuous, as is our moment-to-moment state of alertness, or attentive arousal. For Wundt, the affective modalities or pleasure and arousal and their respective intensity were features or qualities of the simple feelings that arise from internal bodily sensations. People are, wrote Wundt, never in a state entirely free from feeling. What Wundt did not know and could not know at the time due to the rudimentary observational tools then available was the source of arousal and pleasure, which are respectively due to the activity of mid-brain dopaminergic and opioid systems. The neuromodulator dopamine elicits a feeling of alertness and energy, but not pleasure, and is induced through the experience and anticipation of novel positive events. On the other hand, opioids are responsible for pleasure, and are elicited in very small regions or ‘hot spots’ in the brain by exteroceptive (food, drink) and interoceptive stimuli (relaxation). Finally, arousal and pleasure are not just complementary but synergistic. In other words, pleasure stimulates arousal, and arousal stimulates pleasure. This reflects the fact that the neuronal assemblies or nuclei that induce dopaminergic and opioid activity abut each other in the midbrain, and when individually activated can have synergistic effects, or dopamine-opioid interactions. This can explain why high arousal and pleasure, or ecstatic, peak, or ‘flow’ experiences, correspond to novel and ‘meaningful’ experiences during relaxed states. If we map the continuous affective dimensions of Wundt’s proposal to each other, when informed by affective neuroscience, Wundt’s color wheel can bloom, and account for and predict different affective states. The vertical axis would represent dopaminergic activity, from high to low, whereas the horizontal axis would represent the degree of covert neuro-muscular activation, or muscular tension, again from high to low. High arousal would be felt as a sense of energy or alertness, and low arousal would be felt as a sense of lethargy or depression. High tension would be felt as anxiety or nervousness, and low tension would be felt as a pleasurable state of calm or relaxation. Mapping these affective events to their physiological correlates gives us emergent subjective states that match the emotional labels of our affective wheel, or an ‘emotional circumplex’. Thus ‘elation’, or a state of pleasure and arousal would occur when arousal is high and tension is low, ‘frustration’ would reflect high arousal and high tension, ‘worry’ would reflect low arousal and high tension, and ‘relaxation’ would correspond to low arousal and low tension. And so with a little tinkering of Wundt’s proposal, his observations are correct after all, and perhaps as the affective wheel turns can help psychologists arrange the colors of emotion in ways that would do interior decorators of the soul proud. From www.doctormezmer.com/post/the-colors-of-affect For a more detailed analysis of Wundt’s work and how is accurate introspection can map to simple neurological truths, see pp. 47-56 in my little book linked below and on my website on the history and implications of the neuropsychology of incentive motivation. www.scribd.com/document/495438436/A-Mouse-s-Tale-a-practical-explanation-and-handbook-of-motivation-from-the-perspective-of-a-humble-creature
I do not see where any of these theories or postulations, explain my reaction when something that is said to me during a communication exchange where my reaction is powerful and surprises me that I reacted in that manner, yet I have no idea what feeling was triggered or the name of the emotion.
@Vicki I have one situation when I sometimes react in a surprising way. I trace it back to my childhood and the way my narcissistic mother treated me. Even better example of triggers from the past was my exchange with one narcissistic (Narcissistic Personality Disorder) woman who used two lines my mother used to manipulate me emotionally. In the instant I felt presence of my mother and the way she made me feel. Something I buried so deep inside and I was not aware of it on daily basis, for many years. I work with a therapist on my emotions and it is like peeling an onion. Method is simple but hard part is facing them. I use various lists of emotions as help. Maybe you have your own triggers from your past or just don't know yourself well enough (sorry, I don't know how to name better alternatives). It's all about staying in emotion until it will go, letting it take it's course (no, I'm not recommending going into rage, etc.) Find the time at the end of the day, remember this feeling, find where you feel it in the body. Take a list of emotions and go through them. When you find right name you will feel a reaction in your body. Stay with it. It can be surprisingly fast. Once you deal with current the older, next will come up. See how it works for you, ask some competent professional for more info because there's more to it. One trap: you may feel frightened, for long time. Not because you need to stay in this emotion but you may have a habit of running away into this state. Theory is food for brain. Find ways to work with your emotions. Good luck P.S. See dr. Todd Grande 'What are Emotions, Feelings, Affect, and Mood' Enjoy)) P.S.'' Sensations: Getting to Know Your Rejection Sensitivity
Unfortunately that's not you managing your emotions...but you being controlled by an emotion (fear...of confrontation). Empowerment and self agency allow a person to face conflict, without it needing to be confrontational or adversarial. Clearing out cognitive distortions and biases help too. Those "lenses" create a lot of self concocted suffering.
This is a super synthesis and description of many different theories. How do we learn to have feelings? We learn how to have feelings by labeling them in our own mind. This label is taught much how language defines thought. We really do not know if languages define thought, but we can examine language and compare languages from the culture from which they came. It is important for children to conceptualize emotions. It is valuable for their emotions to be contextualized too. “You need an emotion concept in order to experience or perceive the associated emotion. It’s a requirement. Without a concept for “fear,” you cannot experience fear. Without a concept for “sadness,” you cannot perceive sadness in another person. You could learn the necessary concept, or you could construct it in the moment through conceptual combination, m but your brain must be able to make that concept and predict with it. Otherwise you will be experientially blind to that emotion.” Says Dr. Lisa Feldman Barrett in her book How Emotions are Made the Secret Life of the Brain. We must introduce children to literature that focuses what our emotions are, how we experience them, and why. Then their emotional vocabulary will be extensive and they will be emotionally intelligent adults.
Common Sense 0:46
James Lange 1:13
Appraise & Label 1:38
Rational Emotive 9:39
Basic Emotions 5:15
Pluchik's emotions Wheel 5:32
Thanks. Its a brilliant insight into the world of understanding emotions.
This video is so underrated. Very very good job! 👌🏽
Exactly
Very good one and informative.
Thanks this helped me understand theories of emotions better, that for me Plutchik is mainly about categorisation, I'm interested in the structure of emotions and their relation to language which also has structural explanations
Best video I have seen so far 👌🏻
A different take on the wheel of emotion from 1897
The colors of the rainbow do not begin to reflect all of the infinite hues of reflected light. However, the myriad colors of the world are not separate things, but are in truth admixtures of three primary colors, red, yellow, and blue. This simple conceptual scheme provided the explanation of color that made the replication of color easy, to the delight no doubt of interior decorators the world over.
Deriving complex structure from elemental processes serves all the physical and biological sciences, and like the metaphors of disease and space and time, can encapsulate a world view in a phrase. However, feelings or affective states have not been so tractable, though an early psychologist would demur. He was the late 19th century psychologist Wilhelm Wundt, the founder of experimental psychology. Wundt wanted to know the rudiments of felt experience, or affect, and his aim was to see if affect, like color, can be derived from rudimentary components. Wundt believed that the affective components of the human mind could be determined by rigorously objective introspection. That is, he thought that affect or feelings could be broken down (or reduced) to their basic elements without sacrificing any of the properties of the whole. Wundt’s introspection was not a casual affair, but a highly practiced form of self-examination. He trained his students to make observations that were free from the bias of personal interpretation or previous experience, and used the results to develop a theory of affect which derived from three bi-polar dimensions. According to Wundt: “In this manifold of feelings… it is nevertheless possible to distinguish certain different chief directions, including certain affective opposites of predominant character.”
Wundt identified three bipolar dimensions whose permutations comprised moment to moment affective states: (i) pleasurable versus un-pleasurable, (ii) arousing versus subduing, and (iii) strain versus relaxation. An attentive reader would note that strain versus relaxation also reflect unpleasant and pleasant affective states, however these states differ from our workaday pleasures and pains because they are continuously rather than intermittently present. So, with this new perspective, Wundt in effect postulated one discrete and two continuous affective dimensions. For example, a delicious meal or touching a hot pan are pleasurable and un-pleasurable states that occur discretely, however the relative activity of the covert musculature is continuous, as is our moment-to-moment state of alertness, or attentive arousal. For Wundt, the affective modalities or pleasure and arousal and their respective intensity were features or qualities of the simple feelings that arise from internal bodily sensations. People are, wrote Wundt, never in a state entirely free from feeling.
What Wundt did not know and could not know at the time due to the rudimentary observational tools then available was the source of arousal and pleasure, which are respectively due to the activity of mid-brain dopaminergic and opioid systems. The neuromodulator dopamine elicits a feeling of alertness and energy, but not pleasure, and is induced through the experience and anticipation of novel positive events. On the other hand, opioids are responsible for pleasure, and are elicited in very small regions or ‘hot spots’ in the brain by exteroceptive (food, drink) and interoceptive stimuli (relaxation). Finally, arousal and pleasure are not just complementary but synergistic. In other words, pleasure stimulates arousal, and arousal stimulates pleasure. This reflects the fact that the neuronal assemblies or nuclei that induce dopaminergic and opioid activity abut each other in the midbrain, and when individually activated can have synergistic effects, or dopamine-opioid interactions. This can explain why high arousal and pleasure, or ecstatic, peak, or ‘flow’ experiences, correspond to novel and ‘meaningful’ experiences during relaxed states.
If we map the continuous affective dimensions of Wundt’s proposal to each other, when informed by affective neuroscience, Wundt’s color wheel can bloom, and account for and predict different affective states. The vertical axis would represent dopaminergic activity, from high to low, whereas the horizontal axis would represent the degree of covert neuro-muscular activation, or muscular tension, again from high to low. High arousal would be felt as a sense of energy or alertness, and low arousal would be felt as a sense of lethargy or depression. High tension would be felt as anxiety or nervousness, and low tension would be felt as a pleasurable state of calm or relaxation. Mapping these affective events to their physiological correlates gives us emergent subjective states that match the emotional labels of our affective wheel, or an ‘emotional circumplex’. Thus ‘elation’, or a state of pleasure and arousal would occur when arousal is high and tension is low, ‘frustration’ would reflect high arousal and high tension, ‘worry’ would reflect low arousal and high tension, and ‘relaxation’ would correspond to low arousal and low tension.
And so with a little tinkering of Wundt’s proposal, his observations are correct after all, and perhaps as the affective wheel turns can help psychologists arrange the colors of emotion in ways that would do interior decorators of the soul proud.
From www.doctormezmer.com/post/the-colors-of-affect
For a more detailed analysis of Wundt’s work and how is accurate introspection can map to simple neurological truths, see pp. 47-56 in my little book linked below and on my website on the history and implications of the neuropsychology of incentive motivation.
www.scribd.com/document/495438436/A-Mouse-s-Tale-a-practical-explanation-and-handbook-of-motivation-from-the-perspective-of-a-humble-creature
Excellent. Thank you for explaining so well.
Thank you for a clear explanation.
Amazing and informative, thank you for such a great video!
Or how to regulate your emotions? * very insightful. Thank you
❤ thank you
Doesn't Pluchik recognize lust as emotion? How to label It then?
I do not see where any of these theories or postulations, explain my reaction when something that is said to me during a communication exchange where my reaction is powerful and surprises me that I reacted in that manner, yet I have no idea what feeling was triggered or the name of the emotion.
@Vicki I have one situation when I sometimes react in a surprising way. I trace it back to my childhood and the way my narcissistic mother treated me.
Even better example of triggers from the past was my exchange with one narcissistic (Narcissistic Personality Disorder) woman who used two lines my mother used to manipulate me emotionally. In the instant I felt presence of my mother and the way she made me feel. Something I buried so deep inside and I was not aware of it on daily basis, for many years.
I work with a therapist on my emotions and it is like peeling an onion. Method is simple but hard part is facing them. I use various lists of emotions as help.
Maybe you have your own triggers from your past or just don't know yourself well enough (sorry, I don't know how to name better alternatives).
It's all about staying in emotion until it will go, letting it take it's course (no, I'm not recommending going into rage, etc.)
Find the time at the end of the day, remember this feeling, find where you feel it in the body. Take a list of emotions and go through them. When you find right name you will feel a reaction in your body. Stay with it. It can be surprisingly fast. Once you deal with current the older, next will come up.
See how it works for you, ask some competent professional for more info because there's more to it. One trap: you may feel frightened, for long time. Not because you need to stay in this emotion but you may have a habit of running away into this state.
Theory is food for brain. Find ways to work with your emotions. Good luck
P.S. See dr. Todd Grande 'What are Emotions, Feelings, Affect, and Mood' Enjoy))
P.S.'' Sensations: Getting to Know Your Rejection Sensitivity
Very helpful :) Thanks.
THANK YOU SO MUCH
Many people discount the importance of emotions?
I manage my emotions by not being confrontational.
Unfortunately that's not you managing your emotions...but you being controlled by an emotion (fear...of confrontation).
Empowerment and self agency allow a person to face conflict, without it needing to be confrontational or adversarial.
Clearing out cognitive distortions and biases help too. Those "lenses" create a lot of self concocted suffering.
Like wheel what make 1 for me kids