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Positive Emotion: Integrating the Light Sides and Dark Sides [Kõva köide]

Edited by (Associate Professor in Residence, Osher Center for Integrative Medicine, University of California, San Francisco), Edited by (Assistant Professor of Psychology, Yale University)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 576 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 185x257x46 mm, kaal: 1089 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Jan-2014
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0199926727
  • ISBN-13: 9780199926725
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 576 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 185x257x46 mm, kaal: 1089 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Jan-2014
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0199926727
  • ISBN-13: 9780199926725
Teised raamatud teemal:
There has been an explosion of interest on happiness and positive emotion in both the scientific literature and the popular press. While positive emotion is generally considered a source of good outcomes, recent scientific work in psychology has highlighted the ways in which positive emotion facilitates the pursuit of important goals, contributes to vital social bonds, broadens our scope of attention, and increases psychological and physical well-being. But this wave of interest in positive psychology has to date neglected another important possibility regarding positive emotion--that it may, under certain conditions, be maladaptive.

Here, Gruber and Moskowitz propose that the field is now ripe to consider the costs, and not just the benefits, of positive emotion. This book offers the first comprehensive exploration of this phenomenon. It offers a comprehensive summary of current theoretical and empirical work on positive emotion and provides empirical examples of the 'light side' or adaptive benefits of positive emotion according to the degree, context (health, social relationships, coping), and type of adaptive outcome. It also provides empirical examples of the 'dark side' or maladaptive aspects of positive emotion organized according to the degree, context, type and reasons for pursuing positive emotion in healthy and clinical populations. It discusses therapeutic applications regarding how to cultivate and foster healthy positive emotion, and suggests future research to better understand the nature of positive emotion.

Arvustused

This book is a captivating look at the light and dark sides of positive emotions. It addresses the topic of positive emotion fairly comprehensively and provides therapeutic applications as well. * Doody's NotesJune 2014 *

Contributors ix
PART 1 INTRODUCTION
1 Seeing it All: The Light and Dark Sides of Positive Emotion
3(8)
June Gruber
Hillary C. Devlin
Judith Tedlie Moskowitz
PART 2 UNPACKING RECENT DISCOVERIES IN POSITIVE EMOTION
2 The Psychological Construction of Positive Emotion as a Window Into Well-Being
11(23)
Paul Condon
Christine Wilson-Mendenhall
Lisa Feldman Barrett
3 Origins and Functions of Positive Affect: A Goal Regulation Perspective
34(18)
Charles S. Carver
Michael F. Scheier
Sheri L. Johnson
4 Shared and Differentiating Features of the Positive Emotion Domain
52(20)
Belinda Campos
Dacher Keltner
5 The Role of Positive Affect on Thinking and Decision-Making: A Tribute to Alice Isen
72(6)
Judith Tedlie Moskowitz
Margaret S. Clark
Anthony D. Ong
June Gruber
6 Another Little Piece of My Heart: Positive Emotions and the Autonomic Nervous System
78(17)
Michelle N. Shiota
Alexander F. Danvers
7 Positive Emotion and the Brain: The Neuroscience of Happiness
95(21)
Tabitha Kirkland Turowski
Vincent Y. Man
William A. Cunningham
8 Understanding the Neurobiology of Core Positive Emotions through Animal models: Affective and Clinical Implications
116(21)
Jaak Panksepp
9 Genetic and Environmental Influences on Positive Emotionality
137(32)
Ragnhild Bang Nes
PART 3 THE LIGHT SIDE: WHEN AND WHY ARE POSITIVE EMOTIONS GOOD FOR US?
10 The Dark and Light Sides of Humor: An Emotion Regulation Perspective
169(14)
Andrea C. Samson
James J. Gross
11 Positive Affect: A Pathway to Better Physical Health
183(23)
Sarah D. Pressman
Stephanie L. Bowlin
12 How Positive Social Emotions Motivate Actions for the Future Self: Building Bonds, Attaining Ambitions, and Establishing Esteem
206(19)
Lisa A. Williams
David DeSteno
13 Positive Affect and Adolescent Development: Emerging Levels of Understanding and Clinical Implications
225(21)
Dana L. McMakin
Ronald E. Dahl
14 Older and happier? Age-related effects on positive emotion
246(21)
Monika Lohani
Mary Jo Larcom
Derek M. Isaacowitz
15 Positive Emotions in the Aftermath of Loss
267(14)
Anthony D. Ong
George A. Bonanno
C. S. Bergeman
PART 4 THE DARK SIDE: WHEN POSITIVE EMOTION GOES WRONG
16 The Value of Positive Emotion: Philosophical Doubts and Reassurances
281(20)
Daniel M. Haybron
17 On the Downside of Feeling Good: Evidence for the Motivational, Cognitive and Behavioral Disadvantages of Positive Affect
301(22)
Joseph P. Forgas
18 Turning the Tables: How We React to Others' Happiness
323(22)
Margaret S. Clark
Joan K. Monin
19 The Cultural Shaping of Happiness: The Role of Ideal Affect
345(18)
Jeanne Tsai
BoKyung Park
20 The Paradoxical Effects of Pursuing Positive Emotion: When and Why Wanting to Feel Happy Backfires
363(19)
Brett Q. Ford
Iris B. Mauss
21 Positive Urgency and Negative Outcomes: The Dispositional Tendency to Rash Action During Positive Emotional States
382(24)
Melissa A. Cyders
22 Positive Affect Systems in Depression: The Road Less Traveled
406(28)
Greg Siegle
Erika Forbes
Jennifer Silk
23 Positive Emotion Disturbance in Bipolar Disorder across the Lifespan
434(17)
Elizabeth J. Reeves
Ellen Leibenluft
June Gruber
24 Positive Emotion: The Sirens' Song of Substance Use and the Trojan Horse for Recovery from Addiction
451(22)
Adam W. Carrico
PART 5 JUST RIGHT: CULTIVATING HEALTHY POSITIVE EMOTION
25 The How, Why, What, When, and Who of Happiness: Mechanisms Underlying the Success of Positive Activity Interventions
473(23)
Kristin Layous
Sonja Lyubomirsky
26 Mindfulness and Balanced Positive Emotion
496(19)
Richard Branstrom
Larissa G. Duncan
27 Positive Affect Interventions to Reduce Stress: Harnessing the Benefit While Avoiding the Pollyanna
515(20)
Laura R. Saslow
Michael Cohn
Judith Tedlie Moskowitz
PART 6 CONCLUSIONS
28 Positive Emotions: The Good, The Bad, The Inert, and The Complicated
535(4)
Barbara L. Fredrickson
Index 539
June Gruber is Assistant Professor of Psychology at Yale University.

Judith Tedlie Moskowitz is Professor in Residence, Osher Center for Integrative Medicine, University of California, San Francisco.