Grounding Emotion in Situated Conceptualization
Overview
Psychology
Affiliations
According to the Conceptual Act Theory of Emotion, the situated conceptualization used to construe a situation determines the emotion experienced. A neuroimaging experiment tested two core hypotheses of this theory: (1) different situated conceptualizations produce different forms of the same emotion in different situations, (2) the composition of a situated conceptualization emerges from shared multimodal circuitry distributed across the brain that produces emotional states generally. To test these hypotheses, the situation in which participants experienced an emotion was manipulated. On each trial, participants immersed themselves in a physical danger or social evaluation situation and then experienced fear or anger. According to Hypothesis 1, the brain activations for the same emotion should differ as a function of the preceding situation (after removing activations that arose while constructing the situation). According to Hypothesis 2, the critical activations should reflect conceptual processing relevant to the emotion in the current situation, drawn from shared multimodal circuitry underlying emotion. The results supported these predictions and demonstrated the compositional process that produces situated conceptualizations dynamically.
N200 and late components reveal text-emoji congruency effect in affective theory of mind.
Zhong Y, Zhong H, Chen Q, Liang X, Xiao F, Xin F Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci. 2025; .
PMID: 40011404 DOI: 10.3758/s13415-025-01270-8.
Neural Predictors of Fear Depend on the Situation.
Wang Y, Kragel P, Satpute A J Neurosci. 2024; 44(46).
PMID: 39375037 PMC: 11561869. DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0142-23.2024.
Brain-wide representation of social knowledge.
Alcala-Lopez D, Mei N, Margolles P, Soto D Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci. 2024; 19(1).
PMID: 38804694 PMC: 11173195. DOI: 10.1093/scan/nsae032.
Leshin J, Carter M, Doyle C, Lindquist K Front Psychol. 2024; 14:1084059.
PMID: 38425348 PMC: 10901990. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1084059.
Soto D, Salazar A, Elosegi P, Walter A, Mei N, Rodriguez E Psychon Bull Rev. 2024; 31(4):1690-1703.
PMID: 38238562 PMC: 11779780. DOI: 10.3758/s13423-023-02443-7.