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572008088 03 01 01 JB John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 JB code C&EB 7 Eb 15 9789027274755 06 10.1075/ceb.7 13 2011051987 DG 002 02 01 C&EB 02 2352-099X Consciousness & Emotion Book Series 7 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Categorical versus Dimensional Models of Affect</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">A seminar on the theories of Panksepp and Russell</Subtitle> 01 ceb.7 01 https://benjamins.com 02 https://benjamins.com/catalog/ceb.7 1 B01 Peter Zachar Zachar, Peter Peter Zachar Auburn University Montgomery 2 B01 Ralph D. Ellis Ellis, Ralph D. Ralph D. Ellis Clark Atlanta University 01 eng 356 vi 350 PSY008000 v.2006 JMQ 2 24 JB Subject Scheme CONS.GEN Consciousness research 24 JB Subject Scheme PHIL.GEN Philosophy 24 JB Subject Scheme PSY.COGPSY Cognitive psychology 06 01 One of the most important theoretical and empirical issues in the scholarly study of emotion is whether there is a correct list of “basic” types of affect or whether all affective states are better modeled as a combination of locations on shared underlying dimensions. Many thinkers have written on this topic, yet the views of two scientists in particular are dominant. The first is Jaak Panksepp, the father of Affective Neuroscience. Panksepp conceptualizes affect as a set of distinct categories. The leading proponent of the dimensional approach in scientific psychology is James Russell. According to Russell all affect can be decomposed into two underlying dimensions, pleasure versus displeasure and low arousal versus high arousal.<br />In this volume Panksepp and Russell each articulate their positions on eleven fundamental questions about the nature of affect followed by a discussion of these target papers by noted emotion theorists and researchers. Russell and Panksepp respond both to each other and to the commentators. The discussion leads to some stark contrasts, with formidable arguments on both sides, and some interesting convergences between the two streams of work. 05 Zachar and Ellis have produced a valuable tome aimed at dissecting and contrasting the positions of Jaak Panksepp and James Russell on the matter of affect. Several differences are identified, mostly having to do with the different perspectives of the two target thinkers, but several areas of agreement emerge as well. The differences are illuminating and so the journey turns out to be rewarding for anyone interested in the nature and organization of affective processes. Antonio Damasio, Director of Brain and Creativity Institute, University of Southern California 05 <i>Categorical versus Dimensional Models of Affect</i> makes important contributions to the thorny question “What are emotions?” By exploring two extremes in the debate, it helps illuminate the essence of emotion in the broader sense.” Joseph LeDoux, New York University , author of The Emotional Brain. 04 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475/ceb.7.png 04 03 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_jpg/9789027241573.jpg 04 03 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_tif/9789027241573.tif 06 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_front/ceb.7.hb.png 07 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/125/ceb.7.png 25 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_back/ceb.7.hb.png 27 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/3d_web/ceb.7.hb.png 10 01 JB code ceb.7.01zach 1 30 30 Article 1 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">1. Introduction</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Categories, dimensions, and the problem of&#160;progress&#160;in affective science</Subtitle> 1 A01 Peter Zachar Zachar, Peter Peter Zachar 10 01 JB code ceb.7.02pan 31 78 48 Article 2 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">2. In defense of multiple Core Affects</TitleText> 1 A01 Jaak Panksepp Panksepp, Jaak Jaak Panksepp 10 01 JB code ceb.7.03rus 79 118 40 Article 3 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">3. From a psychological constructionist&#160;perspective</TitleText> 1 A01 James A. Russell Russell, James A. James A. Russell 10 01 JB code ceb.7.04pan 119 128 10 Article 4 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">4. &#8220;Nature proposes&#8230;and science disposes&#8221; tertiary vs primary process approaches to&#160;emotions and affects</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Commentary on Jim Russell&#8217;s position</Subtitle> 1 A01 Jaak Panksepp Panksepp, Jaak Jaak Panksepp 10 01 JB code ceb.7.05rus 129 134 6 Article 5 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">5. Preliminary comments on Panksepp</TitleText> 1 A01 James A. Russell Russell, James A. James A. Russell 10 01 JB code ceb.7.06sca 135 154 20 Article 6 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">6. Discrete emotions</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">From folk psychology to causal mechanisms</Subtitle> 1 A01 Andrea Scarantino Scarantino, Andrea Andrea Scarantino 10 01 JB code ceb.7.07dav 155 174 20 Article 7 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">7. Nothing in mammalian psychology makes sense except in light of primary-process affective capacities</TitleText> 1 A01 Paul Sheldon Davies Davies, Paul Sheldon Paul Sheldon Davies 10 01 JB code ceb.7.08bic 175 188 14 Article 8 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">8. Lessons for affective science from&#160;a&#160;metascience of &#8216;molecular and&#160;cellular&#160;cognition&#8217;</TitleText> 1 A01 John Bickle Bickle, John John Bickle 10 01 JB code ceb.7.09led 189 202 14 Article 9 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">9. Affect as appraisal</TitleText> 1 A01 Meaghan A. Leddy Leddy, Meaghan A. Meaghan A. Leddy American University, Department of Psychology 2 A01 Gail C. Robertson Robertson, Gail C. Gail C. Robertson American University, Department of Psychology 3 A01 Jay Schulkin Schulkin, Jay Jay Schulkin Georgetown University School of Medicine, Department of Neuroscience 10 01 JB code ceb.7.10ave 203 224 22 Article 10 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">10. What should theories of emotion be about?</TitleText> 1 A01 James R. Averill Averill, James R. James R. Averill 10 01 JB code ceb.7.11sou 225 242 18 Article 11 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">11. Valence, reductionism, and the ineffable</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Philosophical reflections on the Panksepp&#8211;Russell&#160;debate</Subtitle> 1 A01 Ronald de Sousa Sousa, Ronald de Ronald de Sousa 10 01 JB code ceb.7.12nor 243 256 14 Article 12 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">12. Functional and empirical presuppositions in&#160;Russell and Panksepp</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Neural predispositions of affect</Subtitle> 1 A01 Georg Northoff Northoff, Georg Georg Northoff 10 01 JB code ceb.7.13moo 257 278 22 Article 13 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">13. Comparison of affect program theories, appraisal theories, and psychological construction theories</TitleText> 1 A01 Agnes Moors Moors, Agnes Agnes Moors 10 01 JB code ceb.7.14rus 279 300 22 Article 14 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">14. Final remarks</TitleText> 1 A01 James A. Russell Russell, James A. James A. Russell 10 01 JB code ceb.7.15pan 301 320 20 Article 15 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">15. My reflections on commentaries and&#160;concluding perspectives</TitleText> 1 A01 Jaak Panksepp Panksepp, Jaak Jaak Panksepp 10 01 JB code ceb.7.16ell 321 346 26 Article 16 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">16. Concluding observations</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Comparisons, contrasts, and&#160;some&#160;important&#160;convergences</Subtitle> 1 A01 Ralph D. Ellis Ellis, Ralph D. Ralph D. Ellis Clark Atlanta University 2 A01 Bill Faw Faw, Bill Bill Faw Brewton-Parker College 10 01 JB code ceb.7.17ind 347 350 4 Miscellaneous 17 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Index</TitleText> 02 JBENJAMINS John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 John Benjamins Publishing Company Amsterdam/Philadelphia NL 04 20120627 2012 John Benjamins 02 WORLD 13 15 9789027241573 01 JB 3 John Benjamins e-Platform 03 jbe-platform.com 09 WORLD 21 01 00 99.00 EUR R 01 00 83.00 GBP Z 01 gen 00 149.00 USD S 538008087 03 01 01 JB John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 JB code C&EB 7 Hb 15 9789027241573 13 2011051987 BB 01 C&EB 02 2352-099X Consciousness & Emotion Book Series 7 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Categorical versus Dimensional Models of Affect</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">A seminar on the theories of Panksepp and Russell</Subtitle> 01 ceb.7 01 https://benjamins.com 02 https://benjamins.com/catalog/ceb.7 1 B01 Peter Zachar Zachar, Peter Peter Zachar Auburn University Montgomery 2 B01 Ralph D. Ellis Ellis, Ralph D. Ralph D. Ellis Clark Atlanta University 01 eng 356 vi 350 PSY008000 v.2006 JMQ 2 24 JB Subject Scheme CONS.GEN Consciousness research 24 JB Subject Scheme PHIL.GEN Philosophy 24 JB Subject Scheme PSY.COGPSY Cognitive psychology 06 01 One of the most important theoretical and empirical issues in the scholarly study of emotion is whether there is a correct list of “basic” types of affect or whether all affective states are better modeled as a combination of locations on shared underlying dimensions. Many thinkers have written on this topic, yet the views of two scientists in particular are dominant. The first is Jaak Panksepp, the father of Affective Neuroscience. Panksepp conceptualizes affect as a set of distinct categories. The leading proponent of the dimensional approach in scientific psychology is James Russell. According to Russell all affect can be decomposed into two underlying dimensions, pleasure versus displeasure and low arousal versus high arousal.<br />In this volume Panksepp and Russell each articulate their positions on eleven fundamental questions about the nature of affect followed by a discussion of these target papers by noted emotion theorists and researchers. Russell and Panksepp respond both to each other and to the commentators. The discussion leads to some stark contrasts, with formidable arguments on both sides, and some interesting convergences between the two streams of work. 05 Zachar and Ellis have produced a valuable tome aimed at dissecting and contrasting the positions of Jaak Panksepp and James Russell on the matter of affect. Several differences are identified, mostly having to do with the different perspectives of the two target thinkers, but several areas of agreement emerge as well. The differences are illuminating and so the journey turns out to be rewarding for anyone interested in the nature and organization of affective processes. Antonio Damasio, Director of Brain and Creativity Institute, University of Southern California 05 <i>Categorical versus Dimensional Models of Affect</i> makes important contributions to the thorny question “What are emotions?” By exploring two extremes in the debate, it helps illuminate the essence of emotion in the broader sense.” Joseph LeDoux, New York University , author of The Emotional Brain. 04 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475/ceb.7.png 04 03 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_jpg/9789027241573.jpg 04 03 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_tif/9789027241573.tif 06 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_front/ceb.7.hb.png 07 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/125/ceb.7.png 25 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_back/ceb.7.hb.png 27 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/3d_web/ceb.7.hb.png 10 01 JB code ceb.7.01zach 1 30 30 Article 1 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">1. Introduction</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Categories, dimensions, and the problem of&#160;progress&#160;in affective science</Subtitle> 1 A01 Peter Zachar Zachar, Peter Peter Zachar 10 01 JB code ceb.7.02pan 31 78 48 Article 2 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">2. In defense of multiple Core Affects</TitleText> 1 A01 Jaak Panksepp Panksepp, Jaak Jaak Panksepp 10 01 JB code ceb.7.03rus 79 118 40 Article 3 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">3. From a psychological constructionist&#160;perspective</TitleText> 1 A01 James A. Russell Russell, James A. James A. Russell 10 01 JB code ceb.7.04pan 119 128 10 Article 4 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">4. &#8220;Nature proposes&#8230;and science disposes&#8221; tertiary vs primary process approaches to&#160;emotions and affects</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Commentary on Jim Russell&#8217;s position</Subtitle> 1 A01 Jaak Panksepp Panksepp, Jaak Jaak Panksepp 10 01 JB code ceb.7.05rus 129 134 6 Article 5 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">5. Preliminary comments on Panksepp</TitleText> 1 A01 James A. Russell Russell, James A. James A. Russell 10 01 JB code ceb.7.06sca 135 154 20 Article 6 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">6. Discrete emotions</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">From folk psychology to causal mechanisms</Subtitle> 1 A01 Andrea Scarantino Scarantino, Andrea Andrea Scarantino 10 01 JB code ceb.7.07dav 155 174 20 Article 7 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">7. Nothing in mammalian psychology makes sense except in light of primary-process affective capacities</TitleText> 1 A01 Paul Sheldon Davies Davies, Paul Sheldon Paul Sheldon Davies 10 01 JB code ceb.7.08bic 175 188 14 Article 8 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">8. Lessons for affective science from&#160;a&#160;metascience of &#8216;molecular and&#160;cellular&#160;cognition&#8217;</TitleText> 1 A01 John Bickle Bickle, John John Bickle 10 01 JB code ceb.7.09led 189 202 14 Article 9 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">9. Affect as appraisal</TitleText> 1 A01 Meaghan A. Leddy Leddy, Meaghan A. Meaghan A. Leddy American University, Department of Psychology 2 A01 Gail C. Robertson Robertson, Gail C. Gail C. Robertson American University, Department of Psychology 3 A01 Jay Schulkin Schulkin, Jay Jay Schulkin Georgetown University School of Medicine, Department of Neuroscience 10 01 JB code ceb.7.10ave 203 224 22 Article 10 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">10. What should theories of emotion be about?</TitleText> 1 A01 James R. Averill Averill, James R. James R. Averill 10 01 JB code ceb.7.11sou 225 242 18 Article 11 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">11. Valence, reductionism, and the ineffable</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Philosophical reflections on the Panksepp&#8211;Russell&#160;debate</Subtitle> 1 A01 Ronald de Sousa Sousa, Ronald de Ronald de Sousa 10 01 JB code ceb.7.12nor 243 256 14 Article 12 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">12. Functional and empirical presuppositions in&#160;Russell and Panksepp</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Neural predispositions of affect</Subtitle> 1 A01 Georg Northoff Northoff, Georg Georg Northoff 10 01 JB code ceb.7.13moo 257 278 22 Article 13 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">13. Comparison of affect program theories, appraisal theories, and psychological construction theories</TitleText> 1 A01 Agnes Moors Moors, Agnes Agnes Moors 10 01 JB code ceb.7.14rus 279 300 22 Article 14 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">14. Final remarks</TitleText> 1 A01 James A. Russell Russell, James A. James A. Russell 10 01 JB code ceb.7.15pan 301 320 20 Article 15 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">15. My reflections on commentaries and&#160;concluding perspectives</TitleText> 1 A01 Jaak Panksepp Panksepp, Jaak Jaak Panksepp 10 01 JB code ceb.7.16ell 321 346 26 Article 16 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">16. Concluding observations</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Comparisons, contrasts, and&#160;some&#160;important&#160;convergences</Subtitle> 1 A01 Ralph D. Ellis Ellis, Ralph D. Ralph D. Ellis Clark Atlanta University 2 A01 Bill Faw Faw, Bill Bill Faw Brewton-Parker College 10 01 JB code ceb.7.17ind 347 350 4 Miscellaneous 17 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Index</TitleText> 02 JBENJAMINS John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 John Benjamins Publishing Company Amsterdam/Philadelphia NL 04 20120627 2012 John Benjamins 02 WORLD 01 245 mm 02 164 mm 08 790 gr 01 JB 1 John Benjamins Publishing Company +31 20 6304747 +31 20 6739773 bookorder@benjamins.nl 01 https://benjamins.com 01 WORLD US CA MX 21 137 14 01 02 JB 1 00 99.00 EUR R 02 02 JB 1 00 104.94 EUR R 01 JB 10 bebc +44 1202 712 934 +44 1202 712 913 sales@bebc.co.uk 03 GB 21 14 02 02 JB 1 00 83.00 GBP Z 01 JB 2 John Benjamins North America +1 800 562-5666 +1 703 661-1501 benjamins@presswarehouse.com 01 https://benjamins.com 01 US CA MX 21 14 01 gen 02 JB 1 00 149.00 USD