Results for 'Brian Parkinson'

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  1.  11
    Author Reply: Aligning Social Relations With Faces, Words, and Emotions.Brian Parkinson - 2021 - Emotion Review 13 (2):96-100.
    How do facial movements and verbal statements relate to emotional processes? A familiar answer is that the primary phenomenon is an internally located emotion that may then get expressed on the fac...
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  2.  42
    Classifying Affect-regulation Strategies.Brian Parkinson & Peter Totterdell - 1999 - Cognition and Emotion 13 (3):277-303.
  3.  9
    Heart to Heart: A Relation-Alignment Approach to Emotion’s Social Effects.Brian Parkinson - 2021 - Emotion Review 13 (2):78-89.
    This article integrates arguments and evidence from my 2019 monograph Heart to Heart: How Your Emotions Affect Other People. The central claim is that emotions operate as processes of relation alignment that produce convergence, complementarity, or conflict between two or more people’s orientations to objects. In some cases, relation alignment involves strategic presentation of emotional information for the purpose of regulating other people’s behaviour. In other cases, emotions consolidate from socially distributed reciprocal adjustments of cues, signals, and emerging actions without (...)
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  4.  22
    Current Emotion Research in Social Psychology: Thinking About Emotions and Other People.Brian Parkinson & Antony S. R. Manstead - 2015 - Emotion Review 7 (4):371-380.
    This article discusses contemporary social psychological approaches to the social relations and appraisals associated with specific emotions; other people’s impact on appraisal processes; effects of emotion on other people; and interpersonal emotion regulation. We argue that single-minded cognitive perspectives restrict our understanding of interpersonal and group-related emotional processes, and that new methodologies addressing real-time interpersonal and group processes present promising opportunities for future progress.
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  5.  30
    Making sense of emotion in stories and social life.Brian Parkinson & A. S. R. Manstead - 1993 - Cognition and Emotion 7 (3):295-323.
    This paper is concerned with some limitations of the vignette methodology used in contemporary appraisal research and their implications for appraisal theory. We focus on two recent studies in which emotional manipulations were achieved using textual materials, and criticise the investigators' apparent implicit assumption that participation in everyday social reality is somehow comparable to reading a story. We take issue with three related aspects of this cognitive analogy between life and its narrative representation, by arguing that emotional reactions in real (...)
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  6.  19
    Relations and Dissociations between Appraisal and Emotion Ratings of Reasonable and Unreasonable Anger and Guilt.Brian Parkinson - 1999 - Cognition and Emotion 13 (4):347-385.
    Recent studies have used self-report methods to defend a close associative or causal connection between appraisal and emotion. The present experiments used similar procedures to investigate remembered experiences of reasonable and unreasonable anger and guilt, and of nonemotional other-blame and selfblame. Results suggest that the patterns of appraisal reported for reasonable examples of emotions and for situations where there is a near absence of emotion may be highly similar, but that both may differ significantly from the appraisal profiles reported for (...)
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  7.  28
    Piecing Together Emotion: Sites and Time-Scales for Social Construction.Brian Parkinson - 2012 - Emotion Review 4 (3):291-298.
    This article catalogs social processes contributing to construction of emotions across three time-scales, covering: natural selection; ontogenesis; and moment-by-moment transactions. During human evolution, genetic and cultural influences operate interdependently, not as separate forces working against each other. Further, leaving infants’ environment-open serves adaptive purposes. During ontogenesis, cultural socialization affects emotion development in various ways, not all of which depend on internalization of cultural meanings as emphasized in some earlier social constructionist accounts. Construction also operates over the moment-by-moment time-scale of real-time (...)
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  8.  29
    Worry spreads: Interpersonal transfer of problem-related anxiety.Brian Parkinson & Gwenda Simons - 2012 - Cognition and Emotion 26 (3):462-479.
  9.  24
    Contextualizing Facial Activity.Brian Parkinson - 2013 - Emotion Review 5 (1):97-103.
    Drawing on research reviewed in this special section, the present article discusses how various contextual factors impact on production and decoding of emotion-related facial activity. Although emotion-related variables often contribute to activation of prototypical “emotion expressions” and perceivers can often infer emotional meanings from these facial configurations, neither process is invariant or direct. Many facial movements are directed towards or away from events in the shared environment, and their effects depend on these relational orientations. Facial activity is not only a (...)
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  10.  38
    Comment: Journeys to the Center of Emotion.Brian Parkinson - 2013 - Emotion Review 5 (2):180-184.
    Does appraisal co-ordinate emotional responses? Are emotions usually reached via mental representations of relational meaning? This comment considers alternative causal routes in order to assess the centrality of appraisal in the explanation of emotion. Implicit and explicit meaning extraction can certainly help steer the course of emotion-related processes. However, presupposing that appraisals represent the driving force behind all aspects of emotion generation leads to inclusive formulations of appraisal or restrictive formulations of emotion.
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  11. What's social about social emotions?Shlomo Hareli & Brian Parkinson - 2008 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 38 (2):131–156.
    This paper presents a new approach to the demarcation of social emotions, based on their dependence on social appraisals that are designed to assess events bearing on social concerns. Previous theoretical attempts to characterize social emotions are compared, and their inconsistencies highlighted. Evidence for the present formulation is derived from theory and research into links between appraisals and emotions. Emotions identified as social using our criteria are also shown to bring more consistent consequences for social behavior than nonsocial emotions. We (...)
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  12.  20
    Comment: Respecifying Emotional Influence.Brian Parkinson - 2017 - Emotion Review 9 (3):263-265.
    To what extent does the level of overlap between social appraisal and social referencing depend upon the particular definitions adopted when following different research agendas? I argue that processes of both kinds fall under the more inclusive heading of relation alignment. Relation alignment also covers emotional influence that is not mediated by the communication of appraisal. Similarities, interdependences, and distinctions between these various relation-alignment processes warrant further investigation.
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  13.  16
    Guilt in response to blame from others.Brian Parkinson & Sarah Illingworth - 2009 - Cognition and Emotion 23 (8):1589-1614.
  14.  14
    What We Think about when We Think about Emotion.Brian Parkinson - 1998 - Cognition and Emotion 12 (4):615-624.
  15.  30
    Emotional stylists: Strategies of expressive management among trainee hairdressers.Brian Parkinson - 1991 - Cognition and Emotion 5 (5-6):419-434.
  16.  4
    Cross-Cultural Calibration of Words and Emotions: Referential, Constructionist, and Pragmatic Perspectives.Brian Parkinson - 2023 - Emotion Review 15 (4):348-362.
    Emotion-related words differ across societies and eras. Does this mean that emotions themselves differ in similar ways? Three perspectives on language-emotion relations suggest alternative answers to this question. A referential approach implies that any language's emotion concepts provide a potentially perfectible mapping of the emotional world. Constructionist approaches suggest that linguistic concepts shape culturally different emotion perceptions. By contrast, a pragmatic approach emphasizes the performative functions served by conversational uses of emotion words. From this perspective, emotional language is attuned to (...)
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  17.  26
    Missing Pieces in the Emotion Construction Kit.Brian Parkinson - 2012 - Emotion Review 4 (3):305-306.
    This reply considers how my article’s approach might be extended by attention to individual, contextual, and ecological processes. I agree that individual learning and agency play important roles in ontogeny; that sociologists have conducted informative work about the interpersonal and institutional contexts shaping on-line emotion construction; and that consideration of the relational niches in which discrete emotions consolidate can help to clarify their abstract structure. Emotion construction works with nonsocial as well as social materials.
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  18.  18
    Recognizing Desirability: Is Goal Comparison Necessary?Brian Parkinson - 2010 - Emotion Review 2 (2):159-160.
    Moors and colleagues’ clever studies demonstrate that goal-relevant stimuli can produce rapid, unintentional affective priming, but not necessarily that primes are compared with goal representations following onset. Instead, prior attunements based on changing concerns may prespecify reward value. Even if both these processes count as emotion-relevant appraisal, none of the evidence rules out appraisal-independent emotion under other, unsampled, circumstances, including those where emotions develop as cumulative responses to unfolding and responsive environments rather than as momentary reactions to briefly-presented simple stimuli. (...)
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  19. Unpicking reasonable emotions.Brian Parkinson - 2004 - In Dylan Evans & Pierre Cruse (eds.), Emotion, Evolution, and Rationality. Oxford University Press.
  20. Unpicking reasonable emotions.Brian Parkinson - 2004 - In Dylan Evans & Pierre Cruse (eds.), Emotion, Evolution and Rationality. Oxford University Press.
     
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  21.  24
    Interpersonal effects of strategic and spontaneous guilt communication in trust games.Danielle M. Shore & Brian Parkinson - 2018 - Cognition and Emotion 32 (6):1382-1390.
    A social partner’s emotions communicate important information about their motives and intentions. However, people may discount emotional information that they believe their partner has regulated with the strategic intention of exerting social influence. Across two studies, we investigated interpersonal effects of communicated guilt and perceived strategic regulation in trust games. Results showed that communicated guilt mitigated negative effects of trust violations on interpersonal judgements and behaviour. Further, perceived strategic regulation reduced guilt’s positive effects. These findings suggest that people take emotion-regulation (...)
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  22.  23
    Laughter’s Influence on the Intimacy of Self-Disclosure.Alan W. Gray, Brian Parkinson & Robin I. Dunbar - 2015 - Human Nature 26 (1):28-43.
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  23.  21
    Why Try to Cry: Intra- and Inter-Personal Motives for Crying Regulation.Gwenda Simons, Martin Bruder, Ilmo van der Löwe & Brian Parkinson - 2012 - Frontiers in Psychology 3.
  24.  18
    Moderating effects of mood monitoring on premenstrual dysphoria.Terri Van-Leeson, Peter Totterdell & Brian Parkinson - 2006 - Cognition and Emotion 20 (8):1236-1247.
  25. Parkinson disease.Brian C. Rakitin & Yaakov Stern - 2002 - In Lynn Nadel (ed.), The Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science. Macmillan.
     
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  26.  14
    Scientific evaluation of community‐based Parkinson's disease nurse specialists on patient outcomes and health care costs.Brian Hurwitz, Brian Jarman, Adrian Cook & Madhavi Bajekal - 2005 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 11 (2):97-110.
  27.  13
    Dopaminergic Therapy Increases Go Timeouts in the Go/No-Go Task in Patients with Parkinson’s Disease.Xue Q. Yang, Brian Lauzon, Ken N. Seergobin & Penny A. MacDonald - 2018 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 11.
  28.  14
    Canadian neurosurgeons’ views on medical assistance in dying (MAID): a cross-sectional survey of Canadian Neurosurgical Society (CNSS) members.Alwalaa Althagafi, Chris Ekong, Brian W. Wheelock, Richard Moulton, Peter Gorman, Kesh Reddy, Sean Christie, Ian Fleetwood & Sean Barry - 2019 - Journal of Medical Ethics 45 (5):309-313.
    BackgroundThe Supreme Court of Canada removed the prohibition on physicians assisting in patients dying on 6 February 2015. Bill C-14, legalising medical assistance in dying in Canada, was subsequently passed by the House of Commons and the Senate on 17 June 2016. As this remains a divisive issue for physicians, the Canadian Neurosurgical Society has recently published a position statement on MAID.MethodsWe conducted a cross-sectional survey to understand the views and perceptions among CNSS members regarding MAID to inform its position (...)
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  29.  9
    Comment on Brian Parkinson’s “Piecing Together Emotion: Sites and Time-Scales for Social Construction”.Katharina Scherke - 2012 - Emotion Review 4 (3):303-304.
    To emphasize the importance of “the social” for the construction of emotions, Parkinson distinguishes three time-scales: a phylogenetic one, an ontogenetic one, and a time-scale which focuses on real-time interactions. As far as the sociology of emotions is concerned, the last time-scale is of special interest. The following commentary deals with some questions of the sociology of emotions and draws special attention to the third time-scale Parkinson has suggested.
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  30. Logical Papers. A Selection. Leibniz & G. H. R. Parkinson - 1969 - Studia Leibnitiana 1 (1):76-79.
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  31. Emotions in interpersonal interactions.Parkinson & B. - 2010 - In Klaus R. Scherer, Tanja Bänziger & Etienne Roesch (eds.), A Blueprint for Affective Computing: A Sourcebook and Manual. Oxford University Press.
     
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  32.  12
    Justice in Hiring: Why the Most Qualified Should Not (Necessarily) Get the Job.Brian Carey - forthcoming - Journal of Applied Philosophy.
    In this article I argue that justice often requires that candidates who are sufficiently qualified for jobs be hired via lottery on the basis that this is the best way to recognise each candidate's equal moral claim to access meaningful work. In reaching this conclusion I consider a variety of potential objections from the perspectives of the employer, of the most qualified candidate, and of third parties, but ultimately reject the idea that a person's status as the most qualified candidate (...)
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  33. The Thought of Thomas Aquinas.Brian Davies - 1992 - New York: Clarendon Press.
    Thomas Aquinas was one of the greatest Western philosphers and one of the greatest theologians of the Christian church. In this book we at last have a modern, comprehensive presentation of the total thought of Aquinas. Books on Aquinas invariably deal with either his philosophy or his theology. But Aquinas himself made no arbitrary division between his philosophical and his theological thought, and this book allows readers to see him as a whole. It introduces the full range of Aquinas' thinking; (...)
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  34. On the Matter of Robot Minds.Brian P. McLaughlin & David Rose - forthcoming - Oxford Studies in Experimental Philosophy.
    The view that phenomenally conscious robots are on the horizon often rests on a certain philosophical view about consciousness, one we call “nomological behaviorism.” The view entails that, as a matter of nomological necessity, if a robot had exactly the same patterns of dispositions to peripheral behavior as a phenomenally conscious being, then the robot would be phenomenally conscious; indeed it would have all and only the states of phenomenal consciousness that the phenomenally conscious being in question has. We experimentally (...)
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  35.  26
    Hypocrisy and Epistemic Injustice.Brian Carey - forthcoming - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice:1-18.
    In this article I argue that we should understand some forms of hypocritical behaviour in terms of epistemic injustice; a type of injustice in which a person is wronged in their capacity as a knower. If each of us has an interest in knowing what morality requires of us, this can be undermined when hypocritical behaviour distorts our perception of the moral landscape by misrepresenting the demandingness of putative moral obligations. This suggests that a complete theory of the wrongness of (...)
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  36.  54
    A History of Philosophy Journals, Volume 1: Evidence from Topic Modeling, 1876-2013.Brian Weatherson - 2022 - Ann Arbor: Maize Books.
    This book uses computer modeling to investigate trends in what is published in leading philosophy journals over the last century and a half. The notable trends include the rise of realism from a fringe view to the mainstream metaphysical outlook, the increase in specialization, and the increasing depth of integration between philosophy and physical sciences. It also contains a guide to how to do similar investigations, and discussions of the strengths and weaknesses of the approach.
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  37. Can we explain intentionality?Brian Loar - 1991 - In Barry M. Loewer (ed.), Meaning in Mind: Fodor and His Critics. Cambridge: Blackwell.
  38.  65
    Innateness and (Bayesian) visual perception: Reconciling nativism and development.Brian J. Scholl - 2005 - In Peter Carruthers, Stephen Laurence & Stephen P. Stich (eds.), The Innate Mind: Structure and Contents. New York, US: Oxford University Press USA. pp. 34.
    This chapter explores a way in which visual processing may involve innate constraints and attempts to show how such processing overcomes one enduring challenge to nativism. In particular, many challenges to nativist theories in other areas of cognitive psychology have focused on the later development of such abilities, and have argued that such development is in conflict with innate origins. Innateness, in these contexts, is seen as antidevelopmental, associated instead with static processes and principles. In contrast, certain perceptual models demonstrate (...)
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  39. Pragmatic infallibilism.Brian Kim - 2023 - Asian Journal of Philosophy 2 (2):1-22.
    Infallibilism leads to skepticism, and fallibilism is plagued by the threshold problem. Within this narrative, the pragmatic turn in epistemology has been marketed as a way for fallibilists to address the threshold problem. In contrast, pragmatic versions of infallibilism have been left unexplored. However, I propose that going pragmatic offers the infallibilist a way to address its main problem, the skeptical problem. Pragmatic infallibilism, however, is committed to a shifty view of epistemic certainty, where the strength of a subject’s epistemic (...)
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  40.  14
    Trading In Our Lederhosen for Kilts.Brian K. Steverson, Adriane Leithauser & Tyler Wasson - 2024 - Business and Professional Ethics Journal 43 (1):55-82.
    The popularity of direct-to-consumer genetic ancestry services has exploded over the past five years, with as many as 250 direct-to-consumer genetic ancestry testing companies currently operating and estimates that 1 in 5 Americans are customers of one or more of those companies. Marketing of genetic ancestry testing has consistently linked the results of DNA testing to a consumer’s racial and ethnic identity, and, because of that, can help consumers find out “who they really are.” We argue that the “biologization” of (...)
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  41. To Render Ren: Saving Authoritativeness.Brian Bruya - 2021 - In Ian M. Sullivan & Joshua Mason (eds.), One corner of the square: essays on the philosophy of Roger T. Ames. Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press.
     
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  42. Continued.Brian Hare - 2021 - In Jeremy M. DeSilva (ed.), A most interesting problem: what Darwin's Descent of man got right and wrong about human evolution. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
     
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  43.  15
    John Locke, territory, and transmigration.Brian Smith - 2021 - New York, NY: Taylor & Francis Group.
    This book examines John Locke as a theorist of migration, immigration, and the movement of peoples. It outlines the contours of the public discourse surrounding migration in the seventeenth century and situates Locke's in-depth involvement in these debates. The volume presents a variety of undercurrents in Locke's writing - his ideas on populationism, naturalization, colonization and the right to withdrawal, the plight of refugees, and territorial rights - which have great import in present-day debates about migration. Departing from the popular (...)
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  44. The Early History of the Quale and Its Relation to the Senses.Brian L. Keeley - 2009 - In Sarah Robins, John Francis Symons & Paco Calvo (eds.), The Routledge Companion to Philosophy of Psychology. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  45.  12
    From Zeno to arbitrage: essays on quantity, coherence, and induction.Brian Skyrms - 2012 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Pt. I. Zeno and the metaphysics of quantity. Zeno's paradox of measure -- Tractarian nominalism -- Logical atoms and combinatorial possibility -- Strict coherence, sigma coherence, and the metaphysics of quantity -- pt. II. Coherent degrees of belief. Higher-order degrees of belief -- A mistake in dynamic coherence arguments? -- Dynamic coherence and probability kinematics -- Updating, supposing, and MAXENT -- The structure of radical probabilism -- Diachronic coherence and radical probabilism -- pt. III. Induction. Carnapian inductive logic for Markov (...)
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  46.  49
    The Threat of Anti-Theism: What is at Stake in the Axiology of God?Brian Scott Ballard - 2024 - Philosophical Quarterly 74 (2):408-430.
    Would God's existence be a good thing for us? According to anti-theism, the answer is No. Probably, many theists will want to reject anti-theism. But it isn’t obvious why. After all, whether p is good for us is logically independent from whether p is true. So anti-theism seems entirely compatible with theism. In this essay, however, I argue this seeming compatibility is mistaken. If anti-theism is true, then the theism of most practicing believers is false. And if I am right (...)
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  47. Adapting: A Chinese Philosophy of Action.Brian Bruya - 2023 - Philosophical Review 132 (4):629-633.
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  48. Naturalistic pantheism.Brian Leftow - 2016 - In Andrei A. Buckareff & Yujin Nagasawa (eds.), Alternative Concepts of God: Essays on the Metaphysics of the Divine. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press.
     
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  49. Consciousness, type physicalism, and inference to the best explanation.Brian P. McLaughlin - 2010 - Philosophical Issues 20 (1):266-304.
  50.  23
    Illusion, delusion, and neural sense data: comments on Adam Pautz’s Perception.Brian Cutter - forthcoming - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy.
    This commentary on Adam Pautz's excellent book, Perception, explores the consequences of “spatial illusionism,” the view that the spatial properties presented in experience aren't instantiated in the extra-mental world. First, I consider whether spatial illusionism entails that our ordinary beliefs about the physical world are mostly false. I then argue that spatial illusionism threatens to undermine two arguments Pautz's defends in Perception: his argument that sense data theory is incompatible with physicalism, and his central argument against the internal physical state (...)
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