Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2015.06.010
Title: Affective cognition: Exploring lay theories of emotion
Authors: Ong, Desmond C 
Zaki, Jamil
Goodman, Noah D
Keywords: Social Sciences
Psychology, Experimental
Psychology
Emotion
Inference
Lay theories
Bayesian models
Emotion perception
Cue integration
SOCIAL COGNITION
FACIAL EXPRESSIONS
CUE INTEGRATION
PERCEPTION
EXPERIENCE
MIND
RECOGNITION
ATTRIBUTION
APPRAISAL
LANGUAGE
Issue Date: 1-Oct-2015
Publisher: ELSEVIER
Citation: Ong, Desmond C, Zaki, Jamil, Goodman, Noah D (2015-10-01). Affective cognition: Exploring lay theories of emotion. COGNITION 143 : 141-162. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2015.06.010
Abstract: © 2015 Elsevier B.V.. Humans skillfully reason about others' emotions, a phenomenon we term affective cognition. Despite its importance, few formal, quantitative theories have described the mechanisms supporting this phenomenon. We propose that affective cognition involves applying domain-general reasoning processes to domain-specific content knowledge. Observers' knowledge about emotions is represented in rich and coherent lay theories, which comprise consistent relationships between situations, emotions, and behaviors. Observers utilize this knowledge in deciphering social agents' behavior and signals (e.g., facial expressions), in a manner similar to rational inference in other domains. We construct a computational model of a lay theory of emotion, drawing on tools from Bayesian statistics, and test this model across four experiments in which observers drew inferences about others' emotions in a simple gambling paradigm. This work makes two main contributions. First, the model accurately captures observers' flexible but consistent reasoning about the ways that events and others' emotional responses to those events relate to each other. Second, our work models the problem of emotional cue integration-reasoning about others' emotion from multiple emotional cues-as rational inference via Bayes' rule, and we show that this model tightly tracks human observers' empirical judgments. Our results reveal a deep structural relationship between affective cognition and other forms of inference, and suggest wide-ranging applications to basic psychological theory and psychiatry.
Source Title: COGNITION
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/171924
ISSN: 00100277
18737838
DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2015.06.010
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