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- Title
THE EVOLUTIONARY FOUNDATION OF PERCEIVING ONE'S OWN EMOTIONS.
- Authors
Strout, Sarah L.; Sokol, Rosemarie I.; Laird, James D.; Thompson, Nicholas S.
- Abstract
Much research in the field of emotions has shown that people differ in the cues that they use to perceive their own emotions. People who are more responsive to personal cues (personal cuers) make use of cues arising from their own bodies and behavior; people who are less responsive to personal cues (situational cuers) make use of cues arising from the world around them. An evolutionary explanation of this well-documented phenomenon is that it occurs because of the operation of a cognitive module designed to enable the organism to predict its own impending behavior. This theory suggests that situational cuers would be people for whom external factors are the best source of information about their own future behavior, whereas personal cuers are people for whom cues about themselves are the best source of information about their own future behavior. Such a view is founded in the New Realist philosophy of the early twentieth century, a philosophy that affected psychology through the work of E. C. Tolman and J. J. Gibson.
- Subjects
EMOTIONS; SELF-perception; BEHAVIOR; PSYCHOLOGY; BEHAVIORISM (Psychology)
- Publication
Behavior & Philosophy, 2004, Vol 32, Issue 2, p493
- ISSN
1053-8348
- Publication type
Article