Essay On Emotion And Emotion Experience

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Emotion and Emotion Experience
Emotional disturbances are very common in psychopathology, being present at a wide range of psychological conditions, such as mood disorders, anxiety disorders, impulse control disorders, personality disorders and sleep disorders (Berenbaum, Raghavan, Le, Vernon, & Gomez, 2003; Kring, 2008). Their ubiquity and importance for the course of mental disorders have led many researchers to suggest possible mechanisms through which emotional disturbances contribute to the onset or maintenance of these disorders. In this paper, the …definition… influential theories are being presented and their methodological and practical limitations are being discussed.

Emotion and Emotion Experience According to Berenbaum et al. …show more content…

The experience of emotion, according to Barrett et al. (2007), is a mental representation of emotion, including memories of feelings, hypothetical feelings and current feelings that give information on how such feeling arise. Emotion experiences have a specific content, which explains what an emotion feels like, and their properties are instantiated through neurobiological processes. The nucleus of emotion experience (or mental representation of emotion) is core affect, i.e. neurophysiological states that are experienced as feelings of pleasure or displeasure in response to external stimuli (Barrett et al., 2007). Additional contents of emotion experience that explain the phenomenological differences between the distinct emotions, i.e. anger, fear, sadness, pride, awe, and joy, are the arousal-based content, the relational content or content related to dominance/submission and the situational content (Barrett et al., 2007). For Barrett et al. (2007), the role of the …show more content…

Those components are expected to cohere with one another and across multiple situations and contexts (Kring, 2008). The lack of such a cohesion, which has been defined as emotional disturbance, has been observed to multiple mental disorders. Examples of emotion disturbances include excesses in emotion (e.g. excessive fear in social phobias), deficits in emotion (e.g. lack of empathy in narcissistic personality disorder), social emotional problems (e.g. lack of emotional reciprocity in autism) and regulation problems (e.g. uncontrollable anger in borderline personality disorders) (Kring, 2008). The adoption of a transdiagnostic approach in psychopathology focusing on the common emotional disturbances across different disorders has been suggested and is expected to provide a number of advantages (Kring, 2008). First, the examination of common emotional processes at the symptom level may offer an explanation for the high levels of comorbidity in the widely accepted diagnostic categories and help to reorganize the current diagnostic system; second, a transdiagnostic approach may provide evidence for the causal or maintaining function of several emotion-related processes in mental disorders; and, third such an approach may guide the development of treatment practices targeting the change of emotion processes (Kring,

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