Books on the topic 'Emotional contagion'

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1

Hatfield, Elaine. Emotional contagion. Cambridge [England]: Cambridge University Press, 1994.

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2

Lundqvist, Lars-Olov. Emotional contagion to facial expressions: A social psychophysiological examination. Uppsala: Faculty of Social Sciences, Uppsala University, 1993.

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3

ʻAbbūd, Muná Aḥmad. الميمياء ، نظرية تطورية في تفسير الثقافة. Bayrūt: Bīsān lil-Nashr wa-al-Tawzīʻ wa-al-Iʻlām, 2008.

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4

Delaurenti, Béatrice. La contagion des émotions: Compassio, une énigme médiévale. Paris: Classiques Garnier, 2016.

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5

Wallon, Philippe. La relation thérapeutique et le développement de l'enfant: Émotions, interactions et contagion affective. Toulouse: Privat, 1991.

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6

Podell, Ronald M. Contagious emotions: Staying well when your loved one is depressed. New York: Pocket Books, 1992.

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7

Cacioppo, John T., Elaine Hatfield, and Richard L. Rapson. Emotional Contagion. Cambridge University Press, 2012.

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8

Charland, Louis C. Contagion, Identity, Misinformation. Edited by John Z. Sadler, K. W. M. Fulford, and Werdie (C W. ). van Staden. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198732372.013.15.

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The evolution of the internet and associated social media pose novel challenges for psychiatric ethics. Issues surrounding emotional contagion, personal identity, and misinformation figure importantly among these new challenges, with important consequences for consumers of mental health services, as well as psychiatrists and other mental health professionals. The evolution of the internet and associated social media pose novel challenges for psychiatric ethics. Issues surrounding emotional contagion, personal identity, and misinformation figure importantly among these new challenges, with important consequences for consumers of mental health services, as well as psychiatrists and other mental health professionals.
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9

Prinz, Konstantin. Smiling Chatbot: Investigating Emotional Contagion in Human-To-Chatbot Service Interactions. Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, 2023.

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10

Lindekens, Sacha E. Behavioral outcomes associated with emotional contagion: A study of restaurant tipping behavior. 2001.

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11

Kühnlenz, Sophia. Economic Bubbles: A Story of New Eras, Emotional Contagion and Structural Support. Anchor Academic Publishing. ein Imprint der Diplomica Verlag GmbH, 2014.

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12

Kristjánsson, Kristján. Educating Emotions. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198809678.003.0009.

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Chapter 9 rehearses Aristotle’s somewhat unsystematic remarks about emotion education. Moreover, the chapter subjects to critical scrutiny six different discourses on emotion education in addition to Aristotle’s: care ethics; social and emotional learning; positive psychology; emotion-regulation discourse; academic-emotions discourse; and social intuitionism. Four differential criteria are used to analyse the content of the discourses: valence of emotions to be educated; value ontology; general aims of emotion education; and self-related goals. Possible criticisms of all the discourses are presented. Subsequently, seven strategies of emotion education (behavioural strategies; ethos modification and emotion contagion; cognitive reframing; service learning/habituation; direct teaching; role modelling; and the arts) are introduced to explore how the seven discourses avail themselves of each strategy. It is argued that there is considerably more convergence in the practical strategies than there is in the theoretical underpinnings of the seven discourses.
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13

Clasen, Mathias. How Horror Works, II. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190666507.003.0004.

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The most effective monsters of horror fiction mirror ancestral dangers to exploit evolved fears. For most of human evolutionary history, we have faced threats in the domains of predation, conspecific violence, contagion, status loss, and dangerous nonliving environmental features. We thus very easily acquire fears directed toward threats from these domains. This chapter argues that the nonrandom distribution of human fears is reflected in horror, which features stimuli that mirror evolved fears, often in incarnations that are exaggerated and/or counterintuitive for increased salience, including giant spiders, supernormal monsters such as evil clowns, and physics-violating ghosts. Many monsters are also equipped with contagion cues, thus exploiting an evolved disgust mechanism. Some monsters evoke moral disgust through their violation of norms. To strengthen audiences’ emotional responses to such monsters, horror artists often provide descriptions of characters’ reactions which are mirrored by the audience through an adaptive mechanism enabling emotional contagion.
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14

Podell. Contagious Emotion. Random House Value Publishing, 1995.

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15

Reuben, Alex. Reflection. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199351411.003.0024.

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I have a background as a DJ and in art and design. I feel there’s a rhythm in a group of people and how they move, a sense of contagion through improvisation and structure passing from one to another, a group experience. My films feature dance and are directed to and by sound. When I DJed, the music spatially cut up the nightclub for me: it created a sculptural sensation, a form, a conjoined physical, emotional weight....
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16

Williams, Amanda. The understanding of social effects in pain. Edited by Paul Farquhar-Smith, Pierre Beaulieu, and Sian Jagger. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198834359.003.0077.

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The landmark paper discussed in this chapter is ‘Social modulation of pain as evidence for empathy in mice’, published in 2006 by Langford et al. in Mogil’s lab at McGill University, Montreal. It elegantly demonstrated (1) that mice observed and responded to one another’s pain—effectively, socially mediated hyperalgesia; (2) that this was modulated by the nature of the social relationship, occurring between cagemates but not strangers; (3) that the mechanism in the observing mouse involved central sensitization, not local effects. The interactive behaviour met requirements for empathic responding; neither imitation nor emotional contagion could account for these effects. The findings have implications for lab pain research using rodents, for understanding of empathic responses in animals, and for understanding animal social behaviour more widely.
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17

Sampson, Tony, Stephen Maddison, and Darren Ellis. Affect and Social Media: Emotion, Mediation, Anxiety and Contagion. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Incorporated, 2018.

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18

Affect and Social Media: Emotion, Mediation, Anxiety and Contagion. Rowman & Littlefield International, 2018.

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19

Sampson, Tony, Stephen Maddison, and Darren Ellis. Affect and Social Media: Emotion, Mediation, Anxiety and Contagion. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Incorporated, 2018.

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20

Provine, Robert R. Beyond the Smile. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190613501.003.0011.

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With the expectation that innovation, insight, and discovery will come from researching neglected topics, this chapter explores human instincts, including yawning, laughing, vocal crying, emotional tearing, coughing, nausea and vomiting, itching and scratching, and changes in scleral color. The critical change approach is exploited to analyze recently evolved, uniquely human traits (e.g., human-type laughter and speech, emotional tearing, scleral color cues) and compare them with thir primate antecendents, seeking the specific neurological, glandular, and muscular processes responsible for their genesis. Particular attention is paid to contagious behaviors, with the anticipation that they may reveal the roots of sociality and empathy. Few of these curious behaviors are traditionally considered in the context of facial expression or emotion, but they deserve recognition for what they can contribute to behavioral neuroscience and social biology.
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21

Kravetz, Lee Daniel. Strange Contagion: Inside the Surprising Science of Infectious Behaviors and Viral Emotions and What They Tell Us About Ourselves. Harper Wave, 2018.

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22

Strange contagion: Inside the surprising science of infectious behaviors and viral emotions and what they tell us about ourselves. Harper Wave, 2017.

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23

Zondervan. Contagious Leadership - Lesson 8 : Security or Sabotage: How Emotional Insecurity Prevents Effective Leadership. HarperChristian Resources, 2010.

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24

Contagious Emotions: Staying Well When Someone You Love Is Depressed. Pocket, 1993.

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25

Risse, Guenter B. Introduction. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252039843.003.0001.

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This introductory chapter lays out the major themes and context that will supplement discussion in the succeeding chapters. It considers the implications of the linkages between health and politics and what they might mean for America's present and future. At the same time the chapter also turns toward the past, to San Francisco's early public health initiatives, in order to illuminate ideologies and agencies concerned with human disease, public health, and medical practice. The chapter then launches into a broader discussion on emotions and sentiment—particularly of aversive emotions such as fear and disgust—in order to set up the context upon which this study is based—on the plasticity and contingency of emotion-driven behaviors as they manifest themselves in the moral and political judgments that human beings make in confronting and seeking to control contagious diseases.
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26

Batsleer, Janet, and James Duggan. Young and Lonely. Policy Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447355342.001.0001.

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Young and Lonely The Social Conditions of Loneliness gathers evidence of young people’s experience of loneliness and connection from a youth co-produced research project and locates these within longstanding cultural and historical discussions of loneliness and solitude, friendship and belonging. The study explores loneliness and the experiences of connection/disconnection and inclusion/exclusion with a particular focus on the experience of loneliness in young lives and on how it is navigated when it is first encountered. It proposes that loneliness should not be considered only or even primarily as another psychological disorder or contagion, whilst recognising that severe loneliness may be an aspect of and connected to severe forms of psychological and emotional distress. The ways that young people encounter loneliness have resonance across the age spectrum and for questions of social organisation more generally. In three subsections, The social conditions of loneliness, The experience of loneliness, and Building friendship and connection, which focuses on the innovative critical and creative co-research used methods (which built on youth work practice) which enabled the conditions in which from the transient to the more enduring loneliness is experienced to be explored are explored. An accompanying attention to the range of methods of finding friendship and connection allows the complexity of young people’s experience to be foregrounded. The creative research methods used in the ‘Loneliness Connects Us’ collaborative research give a sense of some of the ways this sensitive topic might be approached and enhance understanding of friendship and solidarity.
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27

Kravetz, Lee Daniel. Strange Contagion: Inside the Surprising Science of Infectious Behaviors and Viral Emotions and What They Tell Us about Ourselves. HarperCollins Publishers, 2017.

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28

Risse, Guenter B. Belle of California’s Molokai. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252039843.003.0007.

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This chapter tells the story of “China Annie,” a former Chinese prostitute diagnosed with leprosy, who had been admitted to the San Francisco pesthouse in 1891. Annie, along with many others like her, has inspired conflicting emotions in the public—though humanized by personal hardships, the nature of her profession was also considered sinful and deserving of punishment. Stigmatized because of their race, residence, and loathsome diseases, Chinese suspects of contagion were avidly sought in the streets or flushed out of their Chinatown hideouts during periodic sanitary raids into the district. The aggressive inquiry was fueled by fears of “the sore-covered heathen” migrating to many countries around the world and infecting other people.
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29

Lifestyle Changes: A Clinician's Guide to Common Events, Challenges, and Options. Routledge, 2008.

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30

Lifestyle Changes: A Clinician's Guide to Common Events, Challenges, and Options. Routledge, 2008.

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