emotional system
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2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 424-446
Author(s):  
Wenhui Tian ◽  
Yanjun Li ◽  
Linzhu Li

PurposeThe paper aims to clarify the influence of different picture contents on consumer's willingness to click pictures when shopping for agricultural products online and examine the intermediary mechanism and boundary conditions of the impact.Design/methodology/approachThe paper opted for an empirical study based on the cue utilization theory and information processing theory, including three experiments to test the existence, intermediary mechanism and boundary conditions of the impact of online picture contents of agricultural products on consumers' clicking intention.FindingsThe paper provides empirical insights about the influence of picture contents on consumer's willingness to click when shopping for agricultural products online. The picture of product's production environment or grower on the search result page can effectively improve consumer's willingness to click the product under dual systemic information processing modes. Compared with product pictures, pictures displaying products and production environment can stimulate more cognitive system processing, and pictures displaying products and its growers can stimulate more emotional system processing, both resulting in higher click intention. However, the above effects only exist in the context of non-branded agricultural products.Originality/valueThe research results not only provide practical guidance for merchants, but also fill the gap in the research on the impact of picture contents on consumers in the field of agricultural products in online marketing.


Author(s):  
Natalia Ciubotaru

The present article focuses on highlighting the theoretical aspects of the topic and the interest shown towards the novelty and infl uence of these concepts – emotional hearing, emotional retrieval and emotional sensitivity, taking into account the peculiarities of each. The psychological research of many scholars have shown that appropriate perception of the emotional state of the speaker’s voice is an important component of man’s relationship with the world around him. The greater the lability of the emotional system, the higher the relationship of emotional hearing with emotional retrieval and emotional sensitivity, and the understanding that they are dependent on emotional susceptibility, which occurs in the forms of emotional reaction, emotional rigidity, and emotional resilience, which depend on the person’s interests, beliefs, goals, relationships, spiritual will.


2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenhui Tian ◽  
Yanjun Li ◽  
Linzhu Li

PurposeThe paper aims to clarify the influence of different picture contents on consumer's willingness to click pictures when shopping for agricultural products online and examine the intermediary mechanism and boundary conditions of the impact.Design/methodology/approachThe paper opted for an empirical study based on the cue utilization theory and information processing theory, including 3 experiments to test the existence, intermediary mechanism and boundary conditions of the impact of online picture contents of agricultural products on consumers' clicking intention.FindingsThe paper provides empirical insights about the influence of picture contents on consumer's willingness to click when shopping for agricultural products online. The picture of product's production environment or grower on the search result page can effectively improve consumer's willingness to click the product under dual-systemic information processing modes. Compared with product pictures, pictures displaying products and production environment can stimulate more cognitive system processing, and pictures displaying products and its growers can stimulate more emotional system processing, both resulting in higher click intention. However, the above effects only exist in the context of non-branded agricultural products.Originality/valueThe research results can not only provide practical guidance for merchants, but also fill the gap in the research on the impact of picture contents on consumers in the field of agricultural products in online marketing.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ipshita Zutshi ◽  
Sonakshi Gupta ◽  
Olivia Zanoletti ◽  
Carmen Sandi ◽  
Guillaume L. Poirier

AbstractPrenatal experience and transgenerational influences are increasingly recognized as critical for defining the socio-emotional system, through the development of social competences and of their underlying neural circuitries. Here, we used an established rat model of social stress resulting from male partner aggression induced by peripubertal (P28-42) exposure to unpredictable fearful experiences. Using this model, we aimed to first, characterize adult emotionality in terms of the breadth of the socio-emotional symptoms and second, to determine the relative impact of prenatal vs postnatal influences. For this purpose, male offspring of pairs comprising a control or a peripubertally stressed male were cross-fostered at birth and tested at adulthood on a series of socio-emotional tests. In the offspring of peripubertally stressed males, the expected antisocial phenotype was observed, as manifested by increased aggression towards a female partner and a threatening intruder, accompanied by lower sociability. This negative outcome was yet accompanied by better social memory as well as enhanced active coping, based on more swimming and longer latency to immobility in the forced swim test, and less immobility in the shock probe test. Furthermore, the cross-fostering manipulation revealed that these adult behaviors were largely influenced by the post- but not the prenatal environment, an observation contrasting with both pre- and postnatal effects on attacks during juvenile play behavior. Adult aggression, other active coping behaviors, and social memory were determined by the predominance at this developmental stage of postnatal over prenatal influences. Together, our data highlight the relative persistence of early life influences.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marisol Parada Sarmiento ◽  
Thiago Bernardino ◽  
Patricia Tatemoto ◽  
Gina Polo ◽  
Adroaldo José Zanella

Abstract Experiences during gestation can alter the mother’s behavior and physiology, affecting the development of the offspring, including the organization of their brains and emotional system. In livestock, one common challenge for pregnant animals is lameness: a multifactorial condition that causes pain, stress, and compromises welfare. Since pain experienced during gestation can affect offspring development, we aimed to quantify the emotional outcomes of 156 piglets born from sows with lameness during pregnancy. Gait scores of 22 pregnant group-housed sows were assessed six times at two-week intervals. Lameness scores varied from 0 (no lameness) to 5 (most severe lameness score). Saliva samples and behavior were assessed in the sows throughout the pregnancy. Sows were moved to individual farrowing pens and placental tissue was collected for glucocorticoids assessment. At 28 days of age, piglets were weaned, weighed, and grouped by body size and sex. Skin lesions were counted in each piglet on days 28, 29, and 30 after birth. During open field and novel object tests the vocalization and activity levels were evaluated. Piglet data were grouped by the lameness score of the sows as G1 (lameness score 0-1), G2 (lameness score 2-3), and G3 (lameness score 4-5). Data analysis included ANOVA or Kruskal-Wallis tests and pairwise comparisons were performed using Tukey and Kramer (Nemenyi) test with Tukey-Dist approximation for independent samples. G2 piglets were heavier than G3 at weaning. G1 piglets had fewer skin lesions at days 28 and 29 than G2 piglets. Moreover, G1 piglets vocalized more than G2 when they were subjected to the combined open field and novel object test. We did not identify differences in the concentration of placental or salivary glucocorticoids among the sampled sows showing different lameness scores. Lameness in pregnant sows has negative effects on the offspring, affecting weight gain, increasing aggressiveness, altering vocalization during an open field, and novel object tests in piglets.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Isaac David

Emotion and its perception are fundamental psychological faculties for the survival of animals and social interaction. This is recognized by the emergence of whole areas of neuroscience devoted to understanding its neural basis. Although the basic components of such emotional system have been identified, the segregation of the milieu of affective experiences into different patterns of brain signals remains poorly understood. Recent functional imaging studies have implicated simultaneous distributed activity as a better correlate of emotional state than its univariate counterpart; however, those attempts have still restricted themselves to regions of interest and severely-filtered data. In this work we tested whether the visual perception of three basic emotions can be decoded from full brain activity using multivariate pattern classification, while keeping localizationist and encoding assumptions at a minimum. Beyond stimuli prediction, we also provide proof of-concept anatomical mapping and discovery of relevant structures.To this end, we ran a face perception experiment on a sample of 16 neurotypical participants while recording their brain activity using fMRI. Per-subject SVM classifiers were trained on the fMRI data, so that they could recognize the emotion class brains were presented with. Results were cross-validated and compared against performance by chance using resampling techniques; and the whole of our reproducible pipeline was further validated using more trivial contrasts embedded within the main emotional task. Thorough assessment of behavioral data points towards the validity of our task.Results show a robust and distributed representation of (perceived) happiness in humans, but not of negative-valence anger and sadness; contrary to the more optimistic (though less diligent) existing studies. Overall, our approach proved more sensitive and anatomically specific than the classical mass-univariate analysis, amidst high-dimensionality concerns. Group inference of SVM parameters suggests the defining information-bearing pattern emanates from known structures in the ventral visual pathway and emotion-related areas. Namely: the primary visual cortex (V1) and surroundings, the middle collateral sulcus and parahippocampal gyrus (mCS, mPHG), the amygdala, the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) and the anterior cerebellum around the vermis; all of them in bilateral fashion. Our work paves the way for further multivariate studies to provide a complementary picture of emotions (and other brain functions), according to its macroscale dynamics.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 1070
Author(s):  
Lorenzo Cominelli ◽  
Gustav Hoegen ◽  
Danilo De Rossi

Humanoids have been created for assisting or replacing humans in many applications, providing encouraging results in contexts where social and emotional interaction is required, such as healthcare, education, and therapy. Bioinspiration, that has often guided the design of their bodies and minds, made them also become excellent research tools, probably the best platform by which we can model, test, and understand the human mind and behavior. Driven by the aim of creating a believable robot for interactive applications, as well as a research platform for investigating human cognition and emotion, we are constructing a new humanoid social robot: Abel. In this paper, we discussed three of the fundamental principles that motivated the design of Abel and its cognitive and emotional system: hyper-realistic humanoid aesthetics, human-inspired emotion processing, and human-like perception of time. After reporting a brief state-of-the-art on the related topics, we present the robot at its stage of development, what are the perspectives for its application, and how it could satisfy the expectations as a tool to investigate the human mind, behavior, and consciousness.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 41-51
Author(s):  
Jarosław Jagieła

The presence of reference frameworks in psychology is complemented by the existence of this concept in transactional analysis. In their current understanding, they are the structure of interrelated responses from the integrated ego-state to specific stimuli. Reference frameworks provide an individual with the opportunity to develop a general perceptual, intellectual and emotional system that influences his behaviour. They constitute a system used to define oneself, other people and the world. The system of reference is present in the individual’s script, his psychological games and transactions. As far as transactions are concerned, they are often tangential, blocking, or refracted. Apart from individual reference frameworks, transactional analysis is interested in their broader social and cultural contexts, which constitute their subsystem functioning as a source of identity. It reveals itself during intercultural exchanges or confrontations. Reference frameworks, being a kind of a window to the world, influence interpersonal relations and the links that exist within them


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Viktorija Cepukiene

Bowen family system theory describes family interactional processes that are carried across the generations and determine an individual’s level of autonomy and emotional reactivity as well as the global functioning of the family. According to the theory, any personal, health-related, or relational issues can be explained as a result of diffused anxiety produced by destructive interactional patterns among family members. Although many studies are revealing the relationship between early family life experiences and functioning in adulthood, there is still a lack of studies exploring the complex mediational models based on Bowen theory that would reveal associations between different family-of-origin variables and adults’ health as well as psychological well-being. The chapter defines the main assumptions of Bowen theory as well as summarizes the main results of three studies demonstrating how family and personal factors defined by Bowen theory, such as family emotional system, triangulation, differentiation of self, relate to adults’ health and psychological well-being.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jimena Laura Frontera ◽  
Hind Baba Aissa ◽  
Romain William Sala ◽  
Caroline Mailhes-Hamon ◽  
Ioana Antoaneta Georgescu ◽  
...  

Abstract Fear conditioning is a form of associative learning that is known to involve different brain areas, notably the amygdala, the prefrontal cortex and the periaqueductal grey (PAG). Here, we describe the functional role of pathways that link the cerebellum with the fear network. We found that the cerebellar fastigial nucleus (FN) sends glutamatergic projections to vlPAG that synapse onto glutamatergic and GABAergic vlPAG neurons. Chemogenetic and optogenetic manipulations revealed that the FN-vlPAG pathway controls bi-directionally the strength of the fear memories, indicating an important role in the association of the conditioned and unconditioned stimuli, a function consistent with vlPAG encoding of fear prediction error. Moreover, FN-vlPAG projections also modulate extinction learning. We also found a FN-parafascicular thalamus pathway, which may relay cerebellar influence to the amygdala and modulates anxiety behaviors. Overall, our results reveal multiple contributions of the cerebellum to the emotional system.


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