16
The Psychology of Emotion New Titles and Key Backlist Contents Aleman et al., The Cognitive Neuropsychiatry of Emotion and Emotional Disorders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Barrett et al., Emotion and Consciousness . . . . . . see centre pages Barrett & Salovey, The Wisdom in Feeling . . . . . . see centre pages Bonanno & Mayne, Emotions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . see centre pages Ciarrochi et al., Emotional Intelligence in Everyday Life . . . . . 6 Ciarrochi & Mayer, Applying Emotional Intelligence . . . . . . . . 5 Dalgleish & Brewin, Autobiographical Memory and Emotional Disorder . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Druskat et al., Linking Emotional Intelligence and Performance at Work . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Eder et al., Distinctiveness of Affective Processing . . . . . . . . 11 Forgas, Affect in Social Thinking and Behavior . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Forgas, Handbook of Affect and Social Cognition . . . . . . . . 10 Frijda, The Laws of Emotion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Gorman, Motivation and Emotion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Gross, Handbook of Emotion Regulation . . . . . . . . see centre pages Hartel et al., Emotions in Organizational Behavior . . . . . . . . . . 8 Haviland-Jones & Barrett, Handbook of Emotions 2nd Ed. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . see centre pages Lewis & Haviland-Jones, Handbook of Emotions 3rd Ed. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . see centre pages Murphy, A Critique of Emotional Intelligence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Niedenthal et al., Psychology of Emotion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Parrott, Emotions in Social Psychology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Parkinson et al., Emotion in Social Relations . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Philippot & Feldman, The Regulation of Emotion . . . . . . . . . . 9 Power & Dalgleish, Cognition and Emotion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Tracy et al., The Self-Conscious Emotions . . . . . . see centre pages Turner, Human Emotions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Yun Dai & Sternberg, Motivation, Emotion, and Cognition . . 10 Journal Cognition and Emotion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

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Page 1: EmotionUK.qxp 15/11/2007 10:00 Page 1tandfbis.s3.amazonaws.com/rt-media/pp/common/brochures/2007E… · science from philosophical, psychological, and clinical perspectives into a

The Psychology of

EmotionNew Tit les and Key Backl ist

Contents

Aleman et al., The Cognitive Neuropsychiatry of Emotion and Emotional Disorders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

Barrett et al., Emotion and Consciousness . . . . . . see centre pages

Barrett & Salovey, The Wisdom in Feeling . . . . . . see centre pages

Bonanno & Mayne, Emotions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . see centre pages

Ciarrochi et al., Emotional Intelligence in Everyday Life . . . . . 6

Ciarrochi & Mayer, Applying Emotional Intelligence . . . . . . . . 5

Dalgleish & Brewin, Autobiographical Memory and Emotional Disorder . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

Druskat et al., Linking Emotional Intelligence and Performance at Work . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

Eder et al., Distinctiveness of Affective Processing . . . . . . . . 11

Forgas, Affect in Social Thinking and Behavior . . . . . . . . . . . . 4

Forgas, Handbook of Affect and Social Cognition . . . . . . . . 10

Frijda, The Laws of Emotion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

Gorman, Motivation and Emotion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4

Gross, Handbook of Emotion Regulation . . . . . . . . see centre pages

Hartel et al., Emotions in Organizational Behavior . . . . . . . . . . 8

Haviland-Jones & Barrett, Handbook of Emotions2nd Ed. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . see centre pages

Lewis & Haviland-Jones, Handbook of Emotions 3rd Ed. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . see centre pages

Murphy, A Critique of Emotional Intelligence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

Niedenthal et al., Psychology of Emotion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2

Parrott, Emotions in Social Psychology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5

Parkinson et al., Emotion in Social Relations . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

Philippot & Feldman, The Regulation of Emotion . . . . . . . . . . 9

Power & Dalgleish, Cognition and Emotion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2

Tracy et al., The Self-Conscious Emotions . . . . . . see centre pages

Turner, Human Emotions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

Yun Dai & Sternberg, Motivation, Emotion, and Cognition . . 10

Journal

Cognition and Emotion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

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New Edition of Textbook!

Cognition and EmotionFrom Order to DisorderSecond EditionMick Power, University of Edinburgh, UKTim Dalgleish, Medical Research Council Cognition andBrain Sciences Unit, Cambridge, UK

“The conceptual angle of the book iscompelling, and based on a measured,broad and informed view of theliterature. The authors show afamiliarity and knowledge of this widedomain of expertise which they conveywith clarity and in an accessible style.”- Warren Mansell, University ofManchester

“This book is a unique contribution tomodern emotion research. There is noother text that manages to weave

strands of historical and contemporary approaches to emotionscience from philosophical, psychological, and clinicalperspectives into a rich tapestry as Power and Dalgleishachieve with the presentation of their SPAARS model. This is afield in motion and the authors capture a moment in time andfoster further integrative research by jumping effortlesslyacross the boundaries of different disciplines.” - ArvidKappas, Jacobs University Bremen

“Once again, with their unique style, Power and Dalgleish haveproduced a most readable, comprehensive, and scholarlybook on cognition and emotion. The integration of theory andevidence is done extremely well, and enhanced with referenceto the authors’ own integrative model of emotion (SPAARS).The authors’ refreshing approach to the understanding ofemotions puts this book in the top league of currentcompetitors.” - Nazanin Derakhshan, Birkbeck, Universityof London

The relationship between thinking and feeling has puzzledphilosophers for centuries, but more recently has becomea dominant focus in psychology and in the brain sciences.This second edition of the highly praised Cognition andEmotion examines everything from past philosophical tocurrent psychological perspectives in order to offer a novelunderstanding of both normal emotional experience andthe emotional disorders.

The authors integrate work on normal emotions with workon the emotional disorders. Although there are manyinfluential theories of normal emotions within the cognitionand emotion literature, these theories rarely address theissue of disordered emotions. Similarly, there are numerous

theories that seek to explain one or more emotionaldisorders (e.g., depression, post-traumatic stress disorder,and phobias), but which rarely discuss normal emotions.The present book draws these separate strands togetherand introduces a theoretical framework that can be appliedto both normal and disordered emotions. It also provides acore cognition and emotion textbook through the inclusionof a comprehensive review of the basic literature. The bookincludes chapters on the historical background andphilosophy of emotion, reviews the main theories of normalemotions and of emotional disorders, and includesseparate chapters organised around the five basicemotions of fear, sadness, anger, disgust, and happiness.

Cognition and Emotion: From Order to Disorder providesboth an advanced textbook for undergraduate andpostgraduate courses in addition to a novel approach witha range of implications for clinical practice for work withthe emotional disorders.

ContentsIntroduction. 1. The Cognitive Philosophy of Emotion. 2. CognitiveTheories of Emotion. 3. Cognitive Theories of Emotional Disorder.4. Towards an Integrated Cognitive Theory of Emotion: TheSPAARS Approach. 5. Fear. 6. Sadness. 7. Anger. 8. Disgust. 9.Happiness. Overview and Conclusions.October 2007: 6¾x9¾: 456ppHb: 978-0-415-37353-1 ISBN10: 0-415-37353-0: £45.00$90.00Pb: 978-0-415-37354-8 ISBN10: 0-415-37354-9: £22.50$44.95Available as a 60-day examination copy

Textbook!

Psychology of EmotionInterpersonal, Experiential, and Cognitive ApproachesPaula M. Niedenthal, Université Blaise Pascal, FranceSilvia Krauth-Gruber & François Ric, Université RenéDescartes, FrancePrinciples of Social Psychology Series

“Niedenthal and her colleagues haveproduced an easy-to-read, well-writtentext that maps much of the scientificterrain of emotion research in acomprehensive and accessiblemanner. They provide an admirabledegree of integration with a multitudeof theoretical perspectives, and offer abalanced summary of even the mosthotly debated questions, making thisbook an essential guide for anyonewho wants to be educated in thescience of emotion.” - Lisa FeldmanBarrett, Boston College

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Textbooks

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“This book is a very welcome addition to the already existingtextbooks on emotions, because it provides an in-depthoverview of the cognitive and social approaches to the studyof emotions. The authors have done an excellent job inintegrating empirical research and theories on emotions and Iam confident that this book will become a standard textbook.Because it raises new questions, and provides originalinsights, the book will be a challenge for both students andteachers.” - Agneta Fischer, The University of Amsterdam

“With a style sufficiently lively for advanced undergraduatesyet coverage that is thorough enough for a sophisticatedseminar for graduate students, Psychology of Emotion is anoutstanding text for a field of growing interest in psychology,neuroscience, and beyond. Drs. Niedenthal, Krauth-Gruber,and Ric synthesize research on the most important topicsmotivating investigators of emotion today, from the structureof emotional experiences to facial expression to gender andculture. Each chapter provides a compelling integration ofclassic research with cutting-edge studies and includes aspecial emphasis on the ways in which emotions can bestudied systematically in the laboratory and in field settings.… This is a fine book and one I would certainly like to use inmy ‘Psychology of Emotion’ course at Yale.” - Peter Salovey,Yale University

This textbook discusses fundamental issues in thedefinition and measurement of emotion, including:conscious and unconscious processes; the ways in whichemotions arise in, and are constrained by, social situationsand social processes; the regulation and sharing ofemotion and their effects on mental health; and themanner in which culture (including subculture) shapes ormoderates some of these processes.

The book also focuses on the component processes ofemotion, their functions, and the ways in which theseinteract with the social environment. Rather than denyeither that emotions are biologically determined or thatthey are culturally created or shaped, both biology andsocial situation are treated as important forces in theelicitation and the experience of emotion.

Each section of the book is structured around specificapproaches or models, and the precise questions thatthey were constructed to address. The theories andmodels are also placed in their historical context.Discussion of the different approaches is elaborated bysummaries of the extant scientific evidence, as well asexamples of specific experiments or studies that weredesigned to evaluate the question. Timely, engaging real-world examples are used from a variety of internationalcontexts.

The pedagogic features, including concise introductionsand summaries, discussion questions, and suggestedreadings, have been incorporated into the volume, makingthis an ideal text for a course of Emotion, which can befound as an option within many social psychology andcognitive psychology courses.

Contents1. What are Emotions and How are They Studied? 2. Structureand Function of Emotion. 3. Self-conscious Emotions. 4. FacialExpression of Emotion. 5. Regulation of Emotions. 6. Emotion inSocial Cognition. 7. Emotion and Group Processes. 8. GenderDifferences in Emotion Processes. 9. Emotion and Culture.September 2006: 7½x9¼: 432ppHb: 978-1-84169-401-6 ISBN10: 1-84169-401-0: £50.00 $75.00Pb: 978-1-84169-402-3 ISBN10: 1-84169-402-9: £19.95 $37.50Available as a 60-day examination copy

Textbook!

The Laws of EmotionNico H. FrijdaUniversiteit van Amsterdam, The Netherlands

“I really like the book. It is, in myopinion, one of the landmark books tobe published in the first decade of thenew millennium. … [Frijda] is one ofthe founding fathers of contemporaryemotions research… and is… wellversed in philosophy, history, andliterature, and this is evidentthroughout this book. I can think ofno book in contemporary psychologythat is as rich in its scope andimagination.” - Robert C. Solomon,University of Texas at Austin

The Laws of Emotion is an accessible work that reviewsmuch of the insightful new research on emotionsconducted over the last ten years. It expands on thetheory of emotions introduced in Nico Frijda’s earlier workand addresses a number of unanswered, basic problemson emotion theory. The author’s goal is to betterunderstand the underlying psychological mechanisms ofemotion. In this book, Professor Frijda also examinespreviously neglected topics of emotion such asdeterminants of emotional intensity, the duration ofemotions, and sexual emotions. It touches on bothevolutionary and neuroscientific explanations.

The book begins by reviewing a number of principlesgoverning emotion, or “the laws of emotion”. The authorthen examines the passionate nature of emotions and themotivational processes underlying them, and the natureand causes of pleasure and pain. Professor Frijda thenexplores the processes that lead to emotional arousal,including cognitive influences and why people care moreabout certain things than others. Emotional intensity isthen discussed, including the often-neglected topic of thecourse of emotions over time. The book concludes withthe author’s insights into complex emotional domainssuch as sex, revenge, and the need to commemorate pastevents.

The Laws of Emotion will appeal to social, cognitive, anddevelopmental psychologists, social scientists,

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philosophers, and neuroscientists, as well as anyoneinterested in the workings of the mind. It also serves as atext for advanced courses in the psychology of emotions orthe neuroscience of emotions.

ContentsPreface. 1. Laws. 2. Passion. 3. Pleasure. 4. Appraisal. 5. Concerns. 6. Strength. 7. Time. 8. “Feelings”. 9. Sex. 10. Revenge. 11. Commemorating.August 2006: 6x9: 384ppHb: 978-0-8058-2597-8 ISBN10: 0-8058-2597-5: £61.50 $99.95Pb: 978-0-8058-2598-5 ISBN10: 0-8058-2598-3: £21.50 $34.50Available as a 60-day examination copy

Textbook!

Affect in Social Thinking and BehaviorJoseph P. Forgas (Ed.)University of New South Wales, AustraliaFrontiers of Social Psychology Series

“In this handbook volume, Joe Forgasgathered the very best psychologistsand asked them to talk about thecauses and consequences of affect insocial life. The conversation is wide-ranging and illuminating. From evolutionto neuroscience to decision-making,these chapters force us to think newthoughts, and to rethink some oldones.” - Daniel Gilbert, HarvardUniversity, author of Stumbling onHappiness

The role of affect in how people think and behave in socialsituations has been a source of fascination to laymen andphilosophers since time immemorial. Surprisingly, most ofwhat we know about the role of feelings in social thinkingand behavior has been discovered only during the last twodecades. Affect in Social Thinking and Behavior reviews andintegrates the most recent research and theories on thisexciting topic, and features original contributions reviewingkey areas of affect research from leading researchers activein the area.

The book covers fundamental issues, such as the natureand relationship between affect and cognition, as well asincluding chapters that deal with the cognitive antecedentsof emotion, and the consequences of affect for socialcognition and behavior.

This volume offers a highly integrated and comprehensivecoverage of this field, and is suitable as a core textbook inadvanced courses dealing with the role of affect in socialcognition and behavior.

ContentsJ.P. Forgas, C.L. Wyland, S.M. Laham, Hearts and Minds: AnIntroduction to the Role of Affect in Social Cognition and Behavior.Part 1. Basic Approaches to Affect and Social Behavior. M.G.Haselton, T. Ketelaar, Irrational Emotions or Emotional Wisdom?The Evolutionary Psychology of Affect and Social Behavior. P.Winkielman, J.T. Cacioppo, A Social Neuroscience Perspective onAffective Influences on Social Cognition and Behavior. H. Bless, K.

Fiedler, Mood and the Regulation of Information Processing andBehavior. C.A. Smith, B. David, L.D. Kirby, Emotion-ElicitingAppraisals of Social Situations. Part 2. Affect and SocialCognition. E. Eich, D. Macaulay, Cognitive and ClinicalPerspectives on Mood-Dependent Memory. G.L. Clore, J.Storbeck, Affect as Information about Liking, Efficacy, andImportance. R.F. Baumeister, K.D. Vohs, D.M. Tice, EmotionalInfluences on Decision Making. D. Keltner, E.J. Horberg, C. Oveis,Emotions as Moral Intuitions. E.W. Dunn, S.M. Laham, AffectiveForecasting: A User’s Guide to Emotional Time Travel. Part 3.Affect and the Social Self. C. Sedikides, T. Wildschut, J. Arndt, C.Routledge, Affect and the Self. Y. Trope, E.R. Igou, C.T. Burke,Mood as Resource in Structuring Goal Pursuit. F.A. Huppert,Positive Emotions and Cognition: Developmental, Neuroscience,and Health Perspectives. R. Erber, S. Markunas, ManagingAffective States. Part 4. Affect and Social Behavior. J.P. Forgas,Affective Influences on Interpersonal Behavior: TowardsUnderstanding the Role of Affect in Everyday Interactions. J.Ciarrochi, J.T. Blackledge, Emotional Intelligence and InterpersonalBehavior: A Theory and Review of the Literature. J.R. Kelly, J.R.Spoor, Affective Influence in Groups. J.G. Holmes, D.B. Anthony,Affect and the Regulation of Interdependence in PersonalRelationships.August 2006: 6x9: 360ppHb: 978-1-84169-454-2 ISBN10: 1-84169-454-1: £37.00 $65.00Available as a 60-day examination copy

Textbook!

Motivation and EmotionPhilip GormanExaminer and Team Leader for the AQA A LevelExamination Board, UKRoutledge Modular Psychology Series

Motivation and Emotion provides anexplanation of emotional experienceand aspects of human behaviourusing psychological, physiologicaland alternative approaches. The brainmechanisms that govern motivationsare discussed, and questions such as‘Why don’t we eat ourselves todeath?’ and ‘How do we know weare thirsty?’ are answered.

Designed for students new to higher-level study, whether at school,

college or university, the book includes practise essays withspecialist commentary to show how to achieve a highergrade; chapter summaries and summaries of key research;a glossary and further reading; and progress and reviewexercises.

January 2004: 5x8: 184ppHb: 978-0-415-22769-8 ISBN10: 0-415-22769-0: £27.50$48.95Pb: 978-0-415-22770-4 ISBN10: 0-415-22770-4: £8.99$14.95Available as a 60-day examination copy

4 www.cognitivepsychologyarena.com

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Textbook!

Emotions in Social PsychologyKey ReadingsW. Gerrod Parrott (Ed.)Georgetown University, USAKey Readings in Social Psychology Series

This reader presents a collection ofinfluential articles on the nature ofemotions and their role in socialpsychological phenomena, alongwith recent work that reflects thecurrent state of the art.

ContentsOverview. Part 1. The Nature ofEmotion. P. Shaver, J. Schwartz, D.Kirson, C. O’Connor, EmotionKnowledge: Further Exploration of aPrototype Approach. N. Frijda, The

Laws of Emotion. Part 2. The Role of Cognition. S. Schachter,J. Singer, Cognitive, Social, and Physiological Determinants ofEmotional State. C. Smith, R. Lazarus, Appraisal Components,Core Relational Themes, and the Emotions. Part 3. Culture andSocialization. H. Markus, S. Kitayama, The CulturalConstruction of Self and Emotion: Implications for SocialBehavior. Part 4. Gender Differences: Evolution,Socialization, and Stereotyping. D. Buss, R. Larsen, D.Westen, J. Semmelroth, Sex Differences in Jealousy:Questioning the “Fitness” of the Model. M. Robinson, J.Johnson, S. Shields, The Gender Heuristic and the Database:Factors Affecting the Perception of Gender-related Differencesin the Experience and Display of Emotions. Part 5. The SocialFunctions of Emotions. D. Keltner, J. Haidt, Social Functionsof Emotions at Four Levels of Analysis. P. Salovey, C. Hsee, J.Mayer, Emotional Intelligence and the Self-Regulation of Affect.Part 6. Emotion and Social Cognition. J. Forgas, G. Bower,Mood Effects on Person-Perception Judgements. H. Bless, G.Bohner, N. Schwarz, F. Strack, Mood and Persuasion: ACognitive Response Analysis. Part 7. Emotion’s Effects onOthers. J. Coyne, Depression and the Response of Others. V.Christophe, B. Rimé, Exposure to the Social Sharing ofEmotion: Emotional Impact, Listener Responses and SecondarySocial Sharing. Part 8. Emotion and Facial Expressions. P.Ekman, W. Friesen, S. Ancoli, Facial Signs of EmotionalExperience. A. Fridlund, Sociality of Solitary Smiling:Potentiation by an Implicit Audience. Part 9. Shame, Guilt,Envy, and Jealousy. J. Tagney, P. Wagner, C. Fletcher, R.Gramzow, Shamed into Anger? The Relation of Shame and Guiltto Anger and Self-reported Aggression. R. Baumeister, A.Stillwell, T. Heatherton, Guilt: An Interpersonal Approach. W.Parrott, The Emotional Experiences of Envy and Jealousy. Part10. The Nature of Emotion, Revisited: The Case of Anger. L.Berkowitz, On the Formation and Regulation of Anger andAggression: A Cognitive-neoassociationistic Approach. J.Averill, Studies on Anger and Aggression: Implications forTheories of Emotion.October 2000: 7x10: 392ppHb: 978-0-86377-682-3 ISBN10: 0-86377-682-5: £44.95 $90.95Pb: 978-0-86377-683-0 ISBN10: 0-86377-683-3: £18.99 $42.95Available as a 60-day examination copy

Applying Emotional IntelligenceA Practitioner’s GuideJoseph Ciarrochi, University of Wollongong, AustraliaJohn D. Mayer, University of New Hampshire, USA (Eds.)

“Applying Emotional Intelligence is aclearly organized and succinctattempt to bring the intellectual ideasunderlying emotional intelligence intothe real world. I strongly recommendit to scholars as an exemplaryexercise in applied psychology, andto laypeople as a toolbox fornegotiating the often-treacherousemotional waters of the socialworld.” - Glenn Geher, Departmentof Psychology, State University ofNew York at New Paltz

“Joseph Ciarrochi and John D. Mayer bring together a smallgroup of experts in the field of emotional intelligence whooffer innovative and doable plans for improving theemotional self, carefully crafted from evidence based theoryand research. This book is a must read for interestedscholars and practitioners alike.” - Neal M. Ashkanasy,Faculty of Business, Economics & Law, The University ofQueensland

“Regardless of which school of emotional intelligence youadhere to, Ciarrochi and Mayer present a convincing casethat emotional intelligence can be enhanced. Combininghard data with practical tools, this book provides usefulinterventions for the workplace and the classroom.” - StevenStein, co-author of The EQ Edge: Emotional Intelligenceand Your Success

The explosion of research on emotional intelligence (EI) inthe past decade has provided increasing evidence that EIcan be measured reliably and can be useful in predictingimportant outcomes, such as managerial effectivenessand relationship quality.

Naturally, people are now asking, “So, how does oneimprove EI?”. Applying Emotional Intelligence collects themost important programs focused on that idea, andenquires of their originators, “What do you do?”, “Why doyou do it?”, and, “What is the evidence for yourapproach?”.

The emphasis of the book is applied, in that it providesand contrasts concrete examples of what we do in ourinterventions in a wide variety of situations. The chapterspresent descriptions of programs, including specificactivities and exercises that influence emotionalknowledge and social effectiveness more generally. Whilepractical in its focus, this book also discusses thetheoretical bases for these approaches.

These are new programs with outcomes that are nowbeginning to be studied. The book presents the mostimportant and recent research findings that examine theefficacy of these programs. Applying EmotionalIntelligence is a “must-read” for anyone interested in EIand its application. This book will be of interest to

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researchers conducting EI intervention research, as well as awide variety of practitioners, including those interested indeveloping EI in organizations, health areas, clinicalpopulations, and school-age settings. Finally, the book isdesigned to be relevant to the reader’s own life, encouragingthe reader to consider how the programs and the exercisesmight impact his or her personality and outlook, as well ascontribute to the development of those who havethemselves participated in the programs.

ContentsJ. Ciarrochi, J.D. Mayer, Introduction. M.A. Brackett, N.A. Katulak,Emotional Intelligence in the Classroom: Skill-Based Training forTeachers and Students. R.E. Boyatzis, Developing EmotionalIntelligence Competencies. S.A. Kornacki, D.R. Caruso, A Theory-Based, Practical Approach to Emotional Intelligence Training: TenWays to Increase Emotional Skills. J. Ciarrochi, J. Blackledge, L.Bilich, V. Bayliss, Improving Emotional Intelligence: A Guide toMindfulness-Based Emotional Intelligence Training. J.D. Mayer,Personality Function and Personality Change. J. Ciarrochi, J.D.Mayer, The Key Ingredients of Emotional Intelligence Interventions:Similarities and Differences.January 2007: 6x9: 184ppHb: 978-1-84169-461-0 ISBN10: 1-84169-461-4: £45.00 $80.00Pb: 978-1-84169-462-7 ISBN10: 1-84169-462-2: £17.50 $29.95

Emotional Intelligence in Everyday LifeSecond EditionJoseph Ciarrochi, University of Wollongong, Australia;Joseph P. Forgas, University of New South Wales, Australia;John D. Mayer, University of New Hampshire, USA (Eds.)

“The second edition of EmotionalIntelligence in Everyday Life is a must-read for serious scholars of emotionalintelligence and those who seek to applywhat we currently know about thisconstruct. Synthesizing cutting-edgeresearch on emotional intelligence, thechapters in this edited volume presentthe state-of-the-science of emotionalintelligence and its application in diverseareas, in a lively, accessible manner.Emotions are an integral and centralcomponent of human functioning and

affairs; this important book enlightens us as to the role ofemotions and their management in everyday life.” - Jennifer M.George, Mary Gibbs Jones Professor of Management andProfessor of Psychology, Rice University

“What I hoped for - and found in this marvelous book - is help inseparating the ‘emotional intelligence’ wheat from the chaff.Starting with pioneer John Mayer’s New Field Guide toEmotional Intelligence and extending through its chapters onemotionally intelligent dating, marriage, education, working, andinvesting, this book offers a state-of-the-art overview of theconcept, its misuses, and its valid applications.” - David G.Myers, John Dirk Werkman Professor of Psychology, Hope College

“This book is an important follow-up to the first edition. As asummary of the current state of emotional intelligence theoryand research, it will be exceedingly useful to researchers. As a

discussion of how emotional intelligence functions in a range ofcontexts - from marriage, to education, to the workplace - it willprove to be of enormous practical value.” - Carol Gohm,Professor of Psychology, University of Mississippi

Since the release of the very successful first edition in 2001,the field of emotional intelligence has grown in sophisticationand importance. Many new and talented researchers havecome into the field and techniques in EI measurement havedramatically increased so that we now know much moreabout the distinctiveness and utility of the different EImeasures. There has also been a dramatic upswing inresearch that looks at how to teach EI in schools,organizations, and families.

In this second edition, leaders in the field present the mostup-to-date research on the assessment and use of theemotional intelligence construct. Importantly, this editionexpands on the previous by providing greater coverage ofemotional intelligence interventions.

As with the first edition, this second edition is bothscientifically rigorous, yet highly readable and accessible to anon-specialist audience. It will therefore be of value toresearchers and practitioners in many disciplines beyondsocial psychology, including areas of basic research,cognition and emotion, organizational selection,organizational training, education, clinical psychology, anddevelopment psychology.

ContentsJ.D. Mayer, J. Ciarrochi, Introduction. Emotional Intelligence andEveryday Life: An Introduction. Part 1. Fundamental Issues. J.D.Mayer, A New Field Guide to Emotional Intelligence. M.A. Brackett,G. Geher, Measuring Emotional Intelligence: Paradigmatic Diversityand Common Ground. M. Buckley, C. Saarni, Skills of EmotionalCompetence: Developmental Implications. J.P. Forgas, C.L. Wyland,Affective Intelligence: Understanding the Role of Affect in EverydaySocial Behavior. M. Zeidner, G. Matthews, R.D. Roberts, EmotionalIntelligence, Coping with Stress, and Adaptation. Part 2.Applications of Emotional Intelligence Research to EverydayLife. J. Fitness, The Emotionally Intelligent Marriage. J. Flury, W.Ickes, Emotional Intelligence and Empathic Accuracy in Friendshipsand Dating Relationships. M.J. Elias, J.S. Kress, L. Hunter,Emotional Intelligence and the Crisis in Schools. D.R. Caruso, B.Bienn, S.A. Kornacki, Intelligence in the Workplace. J. Ciarrochi, J.T.Blackledge, Mindfulness-based Emotional Intelligence Training: ANew Approach to Reducing Human Suffering and PromotingEffectiveness. P. Salovey, Applied Emotional Intelligence: RegulatingEmotions to Become Healthy, Wealthy, and Wise. Part 3.Integration and Conclusions. J. Ciarrochi, The Current State ofEmotional Intelligence Research: Answers to Some Old Questionsand the Discovery of Some New Ones. J.D. Mayer, J. Ciarrochi,Clarifying Concepts Related to Emotional Intelligence: A ProposedGlossary. January 2006: 6x9: 312ppHb: 978-1-84169-434-4 ISBN10: 1-84169-434-7: £46.95$85.00Pb: 978-1-84169-435-1 ISBN10: 1-84169-435-5: £16.95$29.95

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A Critique of Emotional IntelligenceWhat Are the Problems and How Can They Be Fixed?Kevin R. MurphyPennsylvania State University, USA (Ed.)Applied Psychology Series

“Murphy has put together a forcefulcollection of chapters that bothchallenge and support the EIconstruct. Any researcher interestedin emotion will find this text a greataddition to his or her library. … Thebook is worthy of adoption for eitheran undergraduate or a graduateseminar in EI.” - PsycCRITIQUES

This book analyzes importantcriticisms of the current researchon Emotional Intelligence (EI), a

topic of growing interest in the behavioral and socialsciences. It looks at emotional intelligence research andEI interventions from a scientific and measurementperspective and identifies ways of improving the oftenshaky foundations of our current conceptions ofemotional intelligence. With a balanced viewpoint, ACritique of Emotional Intelligence includes contributionsfrom leading critics of EI research and practice (e.g.,Frank Landy, Mark Schmit, Chockalingam Viswesvaran)and proponents of EI (e.g., Neal Ashkanasy, CatherineDaus), as well as a broad range of well-informed authors.

Proponents claim that EI is more important in life thanacademic intelligence, while opponents claim that there isno such thing as emotional intelligence. Three keycriticisms that have been leveled at emotional intelligenceinclude: (1) EI is poorly defined and poorly measured; (2)EI is a new name for familiar constructs that have beenstudied for decades; and (3) claims about EI areoverblown. While the book presents these criticisms, thefinal section proposes ways of improving EI research andpractice with EI theories, tests, and applications.

ContentsJ.N. Cleveland, E.A. Fleishman, Series Foreword. Preface. Part1. The Definition and Measurement of EI. G. Matthews, A.K.Emo, R.D. Roberts, M. Zeidner, What is This Thing CalledEmotional Intelligence? K.R. Murphy, L. Sideman, The Two EIs.J.M. Conte, M.A. Dean, Can Emotional Intelligence BeMeasured? Part 2. The Relationships Between EI and OtherConstructs. F.J. Landy, The Long, Frustrating, and FruitlessSearch for Social Intelligence: A Cautionary Tale. J. Allen, J.Cohen, Emotional Intelligence in Classrooms and in Schools:What We See in the Educational Setting. A. Furnham, Explainingthe Popularity of Emotional Intelligence. N. Brody, Beyond g.Part 3. The Limits of EI. P.J. Jordan, C.E. Ashton-James, N.M.Ashkanasy, Evaluating the Claims: Emotional Intelligence in theWorkplace. M.J. Schmit, EI in the Business World. D.L. VanRooy, S. Dilchert, C. Viswesvaran, D.S. Ones, MultiplyingIntelligences: Are General, Emotional, and Practical IntelligencesEqual? R. Hogan, L.W. Stokes, Business Susceptibility toConsulting Fads: The Case of Emotional Intelligence. Part 4.Improving EI Research and Applications. K.R. Murphy, L.Sideman, The Fadification of Emotional Intelligence. C.S. Daus,The Case for An Ability-Based Model of Emotional Intelligence.

P.E. Spector, H.-A.M. Johnson, Improving the Definition,Measurement, and Application of Emotional Intelligence. K.R.Murphy, Four Conclusions About Emotional Intelligence.April 2006: 6x9: 392ppHb: 978-0-8058-5317-9 ISBN10: 0-8058-5317-0: £61.50 $99.95Pb: 978-0-8058-5318-6 ISBN10: 0-8058-5318-9: £24.50 $39.95

Linking Emotional Intelligence andPerformance at WorkCurrent Research Evidence With Individuals andGroupsVanessa Urch Druskat, University of New Hampshire,USA; Fabio Sala, Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc., USA;Gerald Mount, Grand Valley State University, USA (Eds.)

“The strengths of this book arenumerous. … This well-written andedited book should make a valuablecontribution to the field.” -PsycCRITIQUES

“If you have ever wanted to learnabout Emotional Intelligence and itsimpact on performance, here’s yourchance to learn from the best andthe brightest. As a business leader, Ihave seen the impact of EI onperformance. I can tell you from

personal experience that it absolutely and unquestionablymakes a difference. Do more than read this book … use it!” -Doug Lennick, Executive Vice President-Senior Advisor,American Express

In this edited volume, leading edge researchers discussthe link between Emotional Intelligence (EI) andworkplace performance. Contributors from many areassuch as social science, management (includingorganizational practitioners), and psychologists havecome together to develop a better understanding of howEI can influence work performance, and whether researchsupports it.

August 2005: 6x9: 344ppHb: 978-0-8058-5073-4 ISBN10: 0-8058-5073-2: £61.50 $115.00Pb: 978-0-8058-5074-1 ISBN10: 0-8058-5074-0: £21.50 $39.95

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Autobiographical Memory andEmotional DisorderTim Dalgleish, Medical Research Council Cognition andBrain Sciences Unit, Cambridge, UKChris Brewin, University College London, UK (Eds.)

For those suffering from emotionaldisorders such as posttraumaticstress disorder (PTSD) or depression,aspects of the personal past candominate conscious experience intenacious and toxic ways. Forexample, memories of distressingautobiographical experiences canintrude into awareness as thoughts orimages, as flashbacks or nightmares,each laden with unwanted and painfulaffect.

This special issue of Memory focuses on two broad themes.The first is the nature of autobiographical remembering ofthe personal past — what are the characteristics of suchmemories? And to what extent are they phenomenologicallydistinct from other types of autobiographical remembering?The second theme concerns varieties of difficulties inremembering emotional experiences from complete amnesiato lack of specificity of autobiographical recall. This volumedraws together the world’s leading theorists and researcherson these varied issues to provide a broad overview of thecutting-edge work in this field.

ContentsT. Dalgleish, C.R. Brewin, Editorial: Autobiographical Memory andEmotional Disorder. C.R. Brewin, Autobiographical Memory forTrauma: Update on Four Controversies. A. Speckens, A. Ehlers, A.Hackmann, F. Ruths, D. Clark, Intrusive Memories and Ruminationin Patients with Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: A PhenomenologicalComparison. M. Pasupathi, Telling and the Remembered Self:Linguistic Differences in Memories for Previously Disclosed andPreviously Undisclosed Events. R. Meiser-Stedman, P. Smith, W.Yule, T. Dalgleish, The Trauma Memory Quality Questionnaire:Preliminary Development and Validation of a Measure of TraumaMemory Characteristics for Children and Adolescents. R. McNally,Betrayal Trauma Theory: A Critical Appraisal. J. Freyd, A. DePrince,D. Gleaves, The State of Betrayal Trauma Theory: Reply to McNally(2006), Conceptual Issues and Future Directions. C. Crane, T.Barnhofer, J.M.G. Williams, Cue Self-relevance AffectsAutobiographical Memory Specificity in Individuals with a History ofMajor Depression. P. Spinhoven, C. Bockting, I. Kremers, A.Schene, J.M.G. Williams, The Endorsement of DysfunctionalAttitudes is Associated with an Impaired Retrieval of SpecificAutobiographical Memories in Response to Matching Cues. S.Schönfeld, A. Ehlers, I. Böllinghaus, W. Rief, Overgeneral Memoryand Suppression of Trauma Memories in Posttraumatic StressDisorder.June 2007: 8x10¾: 136ppHb: 978-1-84169-833-5 ISBN10: 1-84169-833-4: £25.00 $49.95A special issue of the journal Memorywww.psypress.com/memory

Emotions in Organizational BehaviorCharmine Hartel, Monash University, Australia; Neal M.Ashkanasy, University of Queensland, Australia; WilfredZerbe, University of Calgary, Canada (Eds.)

This edition was conceived andcompiled to meet the need for acomprehensive book for practitioners,academics, and students on theresearch of emotions in organizationalbehavior. The book is the first of itskind to incorporate organizationalbehavior and bounded emotionality.The editors’ primary aim is tocommunicate the research presentedat the bi-annual InternationalConference on Emotions and

Organizational Life to a wider audience. This edition looks atthe range of research on emotions within an organizationalbehavior framework, organized in terms of the individual,interpersonal, and organizational levels. Particular emphasishas been placed on obtaining the leading research in theinternational sphere. This book is intended to be useful tothe student of organizational behavior, as well as to themanagers of organizations.

January 2005: 6x9: 456ppHb: 978-0-8058-5098-7 ISBN10: 0-8058-5098-8: £61.50 $115.00Pb: 978-0-8058-6178-5 ISBN10: 0-8058-6178-5: £28.99 $49.95

Human EmotionsA Sociological TheoryJonathan H. TurnerUniversity of California, USA

This major new theoretical work takesexisting work on the emotions insignificant new directions. Presentinga unified view of the emotions in thesocial universe, the book explores therelationships between emotions, socialstructure, and culture. Turnerhypothesises how social structure andculture affect emotional arousal inhumans, and vice versa.

This book is essential reading forundergraduate and postgraduate

students researching sociology of emotions, socialpsychology, and contemporary social theory, and is alsorelevant for students and researchers working in the fields ofpsychology and cultural studies.

Contents1. Human Emotions. 2. Why Did Humans Become So Emotional? 3.Social Structure, Culture, and Emotions. 4. Emotional Arousal:Basic Principles. 5. Transactional Needs and Emotional Arousal. 6.Social Structure and Emotional Arousal. 7. Culture and EmotionalArousal. 8. Emotions and Social Change. 9. The Theory Reviewed.June 2007: 6x9: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-42781-4 ISBN10: 0-415-42781-9: £75.00 $135.00Pb: 978-0-415-42782-1 ISBN10: 0-415-42782-7: £23.99

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Emotion in Social RelationsCultural, Group, and Interpersonal ProcessesBrian Parkinson, University of Oxford, UK; Agneta H.Fischer, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands;Antony S.R. Manstead, Cardiff University, UK

“This is one of the best and mostcomprehensive treatments ofemotion available today. The authors,each an accomplished researcher inhis or her own right, have done asuperb job integrating a large anddiverse set of data. Theoreticallysound, empirically grounded, andglobal in scope, the book is alsoclearly and engagingly written. Amajor accomplishment.” - James R.Averill, University ofMassachusetts, Amherst

“At first glance, emotions are simple, biological events insidea person. This important book by three distinguishedresearchers argues, convincingly, that emotions are not sosimple. Instead, they are deeply social events. This book isrequired reading for anyone who deals on a practical or ascientific level with emotion.” - James A. Russell, BostonCollege

Within psychology, emotion is often treated as somethingprivate and personal. In contrast, this book tries tounderstand emotion from the ‘outside’, by examining theeveryday social settings in which it operates. Three levelsof social influence are considered in decreasing order ofinclusiveness, starting with the surrounding culture andsubculture, moving on to the more delimited organizationor group, and finally focusing on the interpersonal setting.

ContentsPreface. 1. Emotion’s Place in the Social World. 2. EmotionalMeaning Across Culture. 3. Cultural Variation in Emotion. 4.Group Emotion. 5. Intergroup Emotion. 6. Moving Faces inInterpersonal Life. 7. Interpersonal Emotions. 8. InterconnectingContexts. November 2004: 6x9: 312ppHb: 978-1-84169-045-2 ISBN10: 1-84169-045-7: £39.95$70.00Pb: 978-1-84169-046-9 ISBN10: 1-84169-046-5: £19.95$34.95

The Regulation of EmotionPierre Philippot, Université de Louvain, BelgiumRobert S. Feldman, University of Massachusetts, USA(Eds.)

“Highly recommended.” - CHOICE

The main goal of this volume is topresent, in an integratedframework, the newest, mostcontemporary perspectives onemotion regulation. The bookincludes empirically-groundedwork and theories that are centralto our understanding of theprocesses that constitute emotionregulation and their consequences.

This volume has several secondary aims, as well. One isto highlight several newer subareas in the domain ofemotion regulation that hold much promise, such as therelationship between psychopathology and emotionregulation. The book also presents data and theory thathave applied value that may be useful for people workingin such fields as communication, psychotherapy, andcounseling. Finally, the volume gathers contributionsacross a variety of subfields and includes authorsworking not just in North America but in other areas ofthe world.

ContentsP. Philippot, R.S. Feldman, Preface. Part 1. BasicPhysiological and Cognitive Processes in the Regulation ofEmotion. A. Bechara, A Neural View of the Regulation ofComplex Cognitive Functions by Emotion. G. Stemmler,Physiological Processes During Emotion. P. Philippot, C.Baeyens, C. Douilliez, B. Francart, Cognitive Regulation ofEmotion: Application to Clinical Disorders. Part 2. Social andMotivational Aspects of Emotional Regulation. E.A. Butler,J.J. Gross, Hiding Feelings in Social Contexts: Out of Sight isNot Out of Mind. M.N. Shiota, B. Campos, D. Keltner, M.J.Hertenstein, Positive Emotion and the Regulation ofInterpersonal Relationships. E. Zech, B. Rimé, F. Nils, SocialSharing of Emotion, Emotional Recovery, and InterpersonalAspects. A. Fisher, A.S.R. Manstead, C. Evers, M. Timmers, G.Valk, Motives and Norms Underlying Emotion Regulation. Part3. Self-Presentation and Emotion Regulation. D.M. Tice, R.F.Baumeister, L. Zhang, The Role of Emotion in Self-Regulation:Differing Role of Positive and Negative Emotions. D. Hrubes,R.S. Feldman, J. Tyler, Emotion-Focused Deception: The Role ofDeception in the Regulation of Emotion. S. Kitayama, M.Karasawa, B. Mesquita, Collective and Personal Processes inRegulating Emotions: Emotion and Self in Japan and the UnitedStates. Part 4. Individual Differences and the Developmentof Emotion Regulation. N. Eisenberg, T.L. Spinrad, C.L. Smith,Emotion-Related Regulation: Its Conceptualization, Relations toSocial Functioning, and Socialization. S.D. Calkins, R.B. Howse,Individual Differences in Self-Regulation: Implications forChildhood Adjustment. C.A. Pauls, Physiological Consequencesof Emotion Regulation: Taking Into Account the Effects ofStrategies, Personality, and Situation. A.M. Kring, K.H. Werner,Emotion Regulation and Psychopathology.June 2004: 6x9: 432ppHb: 978-0-8058-4201-2 ISBN10: 0-8058-4201-2: £40.00 $99.95

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ALSO OF INTEREST

20% more pages in 2007!

Handbook of Affect and SocialCognition

Joseph P. Forgas, University of NewSouth Wales, Australia (Ed.)January 2001: 6x9: 480ppHb: 978-0-8058-3217-4 ISBN10: 0-8058-3217-3: £67.50 $125.00Pb: 978-0-8058-4283-8 ISBN10: 0-8058-4283-7: £33.95$59.95

The Cognitive Neuropsychiatry ofEmotion and Emotional Disorders

André Aleman, Utrecht University, TheNetherlands; Nick Medford & Anthony S.David, King’s College London, UK (Eds.)May 2006: 7x10: 180ppHb: 978-1-84169-990-5 ISBN10: 1-84169-990-X: £29.95 $53.95A special issue of the journal CognitiveNeuropsychiatrywww.psypress.com/cogneuropsychiatry

Motivation, Emotion, and CognitionIntegrative Perspectives on Intellectual Functioningand Development

David Yun Dai, State University of NewYork, USA

Robert J. Sternberg, Tufts University,USAEducational Psychology SeriesJune 2004: 6x9: 480ppHb: 978-0-8058-4556-3 ISBN10: 0-8058-4556-9: £67.50 $125.00Pb: 978-0-8058-4557-0

ISBN10: 0-8058-4557-7: £30.95 $55.00Available as a 60-day examination copy

Cognition and Emotion Editor 2007: Craig A. Smith,Vanderbilt University, USAEditors 2008: Jan De Houwer, Ghent University, BelgiumDirk Hermans, University of Leuven, Belgium

This journal is devoted to thestudy of emotion, especially tothose aspects of emotionrelated to cognitive processes.The journal aims to bringtogether work on emotionundertaken by researchers incognitive, social, clinical, anddevelopmental psychology,neuropsychology, andcognitive science. Examples oftopics appropriate for the

journal include the role of cognitive processes inemotion elicitation, regulation, and expression; theimpact of emotion on attention, memory, learning,motivation, judgements, and decisions; the interplaybetween cognition and emotion in psychopathology,social behaviour, and health-related behaviours;cultural, developmental, psychophysiological, andneuropsychological aspects of the relation betweencognition and emotion; and the nature of particularemotions or emotionality in general. Cognition andEmotion publishes theoretical papers, originalresearch reports, and literature reviews. Submissionscan be considered for publication as regular articlesor brief reports.

Please email your paper as an attachment to:[email protected]. Before submitting, read thefull instructions for authors at the journal’s websiteopposite.

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JOURNAL

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New Special Issue!

Distinctiveness of AffectiveProcessingAndreas B. Eder, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena,Germany; Bernhard Hommel, Leiden University, TheNetherlands; Jan De Houwer, University of Ghent,Belgium (Eds.)

Influential theories on affect andemotion propose a fundamentaldifferentiation between emotionand cognition, and researchparadigms designed to testthem focus on differences ratherthan similarities betweenaffective and cognitiveprocesses. This researchorientation is increasinglychallenged by the widespreadand successful use of cognitive

research paradigms in the study of affect and emotion– a challenge with far-reaching implications. Where andon what basis do theorists draw the line betweencognition and emotion, and when is it useful to do so?Should researchers build more global, integrativemodels of cognition and emotion, or should they relyon local, content-specific models that draw attention toa differentiation between affective and cognitiveprocesses? This special issue compiles differentviewpoints on fundamental issues in the relationshipbetween affect and cognition.

ContentsA.B. Eder, B. Hommel, J. De Houwer, How Distinctive isAffective Processing? On the Implications of Using CognitiveParadigms to Study Affect and Emotion. P.J. Barnard, D.J.Duke, R.W. Byrne, I. Davidson, Differentiation in Cognitiveand Emotional Meanings: An Evolutionary Analysis. S.Duncan, L. Feldman Barrett, Affect is a Form of Cognition: ANeurobiological Analysis. J. Storbeck, G.L. Clore, On theInterdependence of Cognition and Emotion. A. Moors, CanCognitive Methods be Used to Study the Unique Aspect ofEmotion: An Appraisal Theorist’s Answer. T. Lavender, B.Hommel, Affect and Action: Towards an Event-codingAccount. A.B. Eder, K.C. Klauer, Common Valence Coding inAction and Evaluation: Affective Blindness towardsResponse-Compatible Stimuli. M. Rotteveel, R.H. Phaf, MereExposure in Reverse: Mood and Motion Modulate MemoryBias. J.T. Cacioppo, Affective Distinctiveness: Illusory orReal?October 2007: 6x9: 236ppHb: 978-1-84169-814-4 ISBN10: 1-84169-814-8: £39.95A special issue of the journal Cognition and Emotionwww.psypress.com/cogemotion

Distinctiveness of AffectiveProcessing

Special IssuesIssues devoted to a single topic are regularlypublished in this journal. They are sent free tosubscribers, or can be purchased separately asbooks, either via the journal’s website below, or byusing the book order form in this brochure.

Distinctiveness of Affective Processing Guest Editors: Andreas B. Eder, Bernhard Hommel & Jan DeHouwerVolume 21, Issue 6 (2007) See right for further details.

Magda B. Arnold’s Contributions to EmotionResearch and TheoryGuest Editors: Stephanie Shields & Arvid KappasNovember 2006: 6x9: 156ppHb: 978-1-84169-986-8 ISBN10: 1-84169-986-1: £29.95

Autobiographical Memory Specificity andPsychopathologyGuest Editors: Dirk Hermans, Filip Raes, Pierre Philippot & IsmayKremersMay 2006: 6x9: 260ppHb: 978-1-84169-987-5 ISBN10: 1-84169-987-X: £39.95

Associative Learning of Likes and DislikesGuest Editors: Jan De Houwer, Frank Baeyens & Andy FieldFebruary 2005: 6x9: 156ppHb: 978-1-84169-949-3 ISBN10: 1-84169-949-7: £45.00

Impact Factor: 1.623 (Journal Citation Reports® 2007, published by Thomson Scientific)8 issues per yearPrint ISSN: 0269-9931, Online ISSN: 1464-0600Volume 21 (2007)Institutional (print and online): £790.00/$1,304.00Institutional (online only): £751.00/$1,239.00Personal (print only): £291.00/$481.00Volume 22 (2008)Institutional (print and online): £845.00/$1,395.00/€€1,116.00Institutional (online only): £802.00/$1,325.00/€€1,060.00Personal (print only): £311.00/$514.00/€€411.00

Special RatesIf you are a member of one of the following academic societies,you are entitled to a reduction on the Personal Rate of this journal:APA, APS, EPS, ESCoP and ISRE. Email [email protected] details.

Find out more about this journal, orsubscribe, at

www.psypress.com/cogemotion

Special Issue

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The Self-Conscious EmotionsTheory and ResearchJessica L. Tracy, University of British Columbia, USA; Richard W. Robins, University of California, USA; June PriceTangney, George Mason University, USA (Eds.)Foreword by Joseph J. Campos

“What a great book! Self-conscious emotions, such as shame, guilt, and pride, play a pivotal role insocial and self-regulation. The contributors to this book add to our understanding of these emotions atevery level – from their neural basis, cognitive underpinnings, and development, to their societalfunctions and cross-cultural differences. This book is a ‘must read’ for researchers and studentsinterested in personality, identity, emotion, moral development, relationships, and culture.” - Carol S.Dweck, Stanford University

Timely and authoritative, this volume reviews the breadth of current knowledge on the self-conscious emotions and their role in psychological and social functioning. Leading investigatorsapproach the subject from multiple levels of analysis, ranging from basic brain mechanisms tocomplex social processes. Chapters present compelling advances in understanding research onthe most fundamental self-conscious emotions: embarrassment, guilt, humiliation, pride, andshame. Addressed are neural and evolutionary mechanisms, developmental processes, cultural

differences and similarities, and influences on a wide array of social behaviors and personality processes. A uniquechapter on assessment describes and evaluates the full range of available measures.

ContentsPart 1. Theoretical Perspectives: Social, Cognitive, and Neural Mechanisms Underlying Self-Conscious Emotions. Tracy,Robins,The Self in Self-Conscious Emotions: A Cognitive Appraisal Approach. Tangney, Stuewig, Mashek, What’s Moral about theSelf-Conscious Emotions? Leary, How the Self Became Involved in Affective Experience: Three Sources of Self-Reflective Emotions.Beer, Neural Systems for Self-Conscious Emotions and Their Underlying Appraisals. Gruenewald, Dickerson, Kemeny, A SocialFunction for Self-Conscious Emotions: The Social Self Preservation Theory. Part 2. Developmental Contexts and Processes.Lagattuta, Thompson, The Development of Self-Conscious Emotions: Cognitive Processes and Social Influences. Hart, Matsuba, TheDevelopment of Pride and Moral Life. Lewis, Self-Conscious Emotional Development. Part 3. Cultural Influences. Goetz, Keltner,Shifting Meanings of Self-Conscious Emotions across Cultures: A Social-Functional Approach. Fessler, From Appeasement toConformity: Evolutionary and Cultural Perspectives on Shame, Competition, and Cooperation. Edelstein, Shaver, A Cross-CulturalExamination of Lexical Studies of Self-Conscious Emotions. Wong, Tsai, Cultural Models of Shame and Guilt. Li, Fischer, Respect asa Positive Self-Conscious Emotion in European Americans and Chinese. Part 4. Specific Emotions: Function andConceptualization. Miller, Is Embarrassment a Blessing or a Curse? Tracy, Robins, The Nature of Pride. Gilbert, The Evolution ofShame as a Marker for Relationship Security: A Biopsychosocial Approach. Elison, Harter, Humiliation Causes, Correlates, andConsequences. Ferguson, Brugman, White, Eyre, Shame and Guilt as Morally Warranted Experiences. Part 5. Special Topics andApplications. Lickel, Schmader, Spanovic, Group-Conscious Emotions: The Implications of Others’ Wrongdoings for Identity andRelationships. Stuewig, Tangney, Shame and Guilt in Antisocial and Risky Behaviors. Roberts, Goldenberg, Wrestling with Nature: AnExistential Perspective on the Body and Gender in Self-Conscious Emotions. Bosson, Prewitt-Freilino, Overvalued and Ashamed:Considering the Roles of Self-Esteem and Self-Conscious Emotions in Covert Narcissism. Scheff, Runaway Nationalism: Alienation,Shame, and Anger. Part 6. Assessment. Robins, Noftle, Tracy, Assessing Self-Conscious Emotions: A Review of Self-Report andNonverbal Measures. September 2007: 7x10: 516ppHb: 978-1-59385-486-7 ISBN10: 1-59385-486-2: £41.00

New Titles in The Psychology of Emotionfrom Guilford Press www.guilford.com

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Now in paperback!

Emotion and ConsciousnessLisa Feldman Barrett, Boston College, USA; Paula M.Niedenthal, Université Blaise Pascal, France; PiotrWinkielman, University of California, USA (Eds.)

“The chapters in this wonderful book areinformative, intelligent, and occasionallystartling. Emotion and consciousnessare two of psychology’s hottest topics,and this book explores their collision. Asyou might expect, the bang is a bigone.” - Daniel Gilbert, HarvardUniversity

“This book represents a blossoming-outof a number of important trends inthinking about emotions. Major issuesrelated to unconscious and conscious

processes in emotion – such as cognition-emotion interactions,affect induction, and embodiment in perception and thought –are examined in the context of closely reasoned and expertlyexecuted research programs. Several chapters presentpromising developments of new research streams, substantiallyadding to insight and knowledge. Brimming with information,this is a well-written, challenging text for graduate-level studentsinterested in current research areas and controversies in thefield.” - Nico H. Frijda, Ph.D.

Presenting state-of-the-art work on the conscious andunconscious processes involved in emotion, this integrativevolume brings together leading psychologists,neuroscientists, and philosophers. Carefully organized,tightly edited chapters address such compelling questionsas how bodily responses contribute to consciousexperience, whether “unconscious emotion” exists, howaffect is transmitted from one person to another, and howemotional responses are produced in the brain. Bringing anew level of coherence to lines of inquiry that often remaindisparate, the book identifies key, cross-cutting ideas andthemes and sets forth a cogent agenda for future research.

ContentsBarrett, Niedenthal, Winkielman, Introduction. Part 1. Cognitionand Emotion. Niedenthal, Barsalou, Ric, Krauth-Gruber,Embodiment in the Acquisition and Use of Emotion Knowledge.Phelps, The Interaction of Emotion and Cognition: Insights FromStudies of the Human Amygdala. Gray, Schaefer, Braver, Most,Affect and the Resolution of Cognitive Control Dilemmas. Part 2.Unconscious Emotional Processing: Perception of VisualStimuli. Lundqvist, Öhman, Caught by the Evil Eye: NonconsciousInformation Processing, Emotion, and Attention to Facial Stimuli. deGelder, Nonconscious Emotions: New Findings and Perspectiveson Nonconscious Facial Expression Recognition and its Voice andWhole-body Contexts. Atkinson, Adolphs, Visual EmotionPerception: Mechanisms and Processes. Part 3. UnconsciousEmotional Behavior. Owren, Rendall, Bachorowski, Conscious andUnconscious Emotion in Nonlinguistic Vocal Communication.Bouton, Behavior Systems and the Contextual Control of Anxiety,Fear, and Panic. Part 4. The Experience of Emotion. Charland,Emotion Experience and the Indeterminacy of Valence. Barrett,Feeling is Perceiving: Core Affect and Conceptualization in theExperience of Emotion. Part 5. Perspectives on theConscious–Unconscious Debate. Smith, Neumann, Emotion

Processes Considered from the Perspective of Dual-ProcessModels. Scherer, Unconscious Processes in Emotion: The Bulk ofthe Iceberg. Winkielman, Berridge, Wilbarger, Emotion, Behavior,and Conscious Experience. Prinz, Emotions, Embodiment, andAwareness. Clore, Storbeck, Robinson, Centerbar, Seven Sins inthe Study of Unconscious Affect.March 2007: 6x9: 420ppPb: 978-1-59385-458-4 ISBN10: 1-59385-458-7: £18.95January 2005Hb: 978-1-59385-188-0 ISBN10: 1-59385-188-X: £35.00

Handbook of Emotion RegulationJames J. Gross, Stanford University, USA (Ed.)

“This handbook is an invaluableresource for researchers interested inemotion, mood, and self-regulation. Itbrings together leaders in diverse fieldsto explore the biological andpsychosocial underpinnings and clinicalimplications of emotion regulation. Asuitable primary or secondary text for aseminar on emotion regulation, thisvolume is likely to become a classic inthe field.” - Susan Nolen-Hoeksema,Yale University

“If human beings are fundamentally in the business of pursuingpleasure and avoiding pain, then this book is about the mostfundamental aspect of human life. At long last, the world’sexperts on emotion regulation have come together to provide agrand tour of the research landscape, and the result is wellworth the price of admission. Both students and scientists willfind much to be learned in these pages.” - Daniel Gilbert,Harvard University

This authoritative volume provides a comprehensive roadmap of the important and rapidly growing field of emotionregulation. Each of the thirty chapters in this Handbookreviews the current state of knowledge on the topic at hand,describes salient research methods, and identifies promisingdirections for future investigation. The contributors – who arethe foremost experts in the field – address vital questionsabout the neurobiological and cognitive bases of emotionregulation, how we develop and use regulatory strategiesacross the lifespan, individual differences in emotionregulation tendencies, social psychological approaches, andimplications for psychopathology, clinical interventions, andhealth.

ContentsPart 1. Foundations. Gross, Thompson, Emotion Regulation:Conceptual Foundations. Part 2. Biological Bases. Quirk,Prefrontal–Amygdala Interactions in the Regulation of Fear.Davidson, Fox, Kalin, Neural Bases of Emotion Regulation inNonhuman Primates and Humans. Beer, Lombardo, Insights intoEmotion Regulation from Neuropsychology. Ochsner, Gross, TheNeural Architecture of Emotion Regulation. Hariri, Forbes, Geneticsof Emotion Regulation. Part 3. Cognitive Foundations. Zelazo,Cunningham, Executive Function: Mechanisms Underlying EmotionRegulation. Peterson, Park, Explanatory Style and EmotionRegulation. Loewenstein, Affective Regulation and AffectiveForecasting. McClure, Botvinick, Yeung, Greene, Cohen, ConflictMonitoring in Cognition–Emotion Competition. Part 4.

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Developmental Approaches. Calkins, Hill, CaregiverInfluences on Emerging Emotion Regulation: Biological andEnvironmental Transactions in Early Development. Thompson,Meyer, Socialization of Emotion Regulation in the Family.Stegge, Terwogt, Awareness and Regulation of Emotion inTypical and Atypical Development. Eisenberg, Hofer, Vaughan,Effortful Control and its Socioemotional Consequences.Charles, Carstensen, Emotion Regulation and Aging. Part 5.Personality Processes and Individual Differences. Rothbart,Sheese, Temperament and Emotion Regulation. John, Gross,Individual Differences in Emotion Regulation. Westen, Blagov,A Clinical–empirical Model of Emotion Regulation: FromDefense and Motivated Reasoning to Emotional ConstraintSatisfaction. Wranik, Barrett, Salovey, Intelligent EmotionRegulation: Is Knowledge Power? Baumeister, Zell, Tice, HowEmotions Facilitate and Impair Self-Regulation. Part 6. SocialApproaches. Bargh, Williams, The Nonconscious Regulationof Emotion. Shaver, Mikulincer, Adult Attachment Strategiesand the Regulation of Emotion. Rimé, Interpersonal EmotionRegulation. Mesquita, Albert, The Cultural Regulation ofEmotions. Watts, Emotion Regulation and Religion. Part 7.Clinical Applications. Mullin, Hinshaw, Emotion Regulationand Externalizing Disorders in Children and Adolescents.Campbell-Sills, Barlow, Incorporating Emotion Regulation intoConceptualizations and Treatments of Anxiety and MoodDisorders. Sher, Grekin, Alcohol and Affect Regulation.Linehan, Bohus, Lynch, Dialectical Behavior Therapy forPervasive Emotion Dysregulation: Theoretical and PracticalUnderpinnings. Sapolsky, Stress, Stress-related Disease, andEmotional Regulation. Appendix. February 2007: 7x10: 654ppHb: 978-1-59385-148-4 ISBN10: 1-59385-148-0: £57.50

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Also of InterestEmotionsCurrent Issues and FutureDirectionsGeorge A. Bonanno, University ofColumbia, USATracy J. Mayne, New York CityDepartment of Health, USA (Eds.)Emotions and Social Behavior SeriesMarch 2001: 6x9: 430ppHb: 978-1-57230-622-6 ISBN10: 1-57230-622-X: £38.50

Handbook of EmotionsSecond EditionMichael Lewis, UMDNJ-Robert WoodJohnson Medical School, USA Jeannette M. Haviland-Jones,Rutgers University, USA (Eds.)May 2004: 7x10: 720ppPb: 978-1-59385-029-6 ISBN10: 1-59385-029-8: £30.50July 2000: Hb: 978-1-57230-529-8ISBN10: 1-57230-529-0: £57.50

The Wisdom in FeelingPsychological Processes inEmotional IntelligenceLisa Feldman Barrett, BostonCollege, USAPeter Salovey, Yale University, USA(Eds.)November 2002: 6x9: 444pp978-1-57230-785-8 ISBN-10: 1-57230-785-4: £40.00

Forthcoming!

Handbook of EmotionsThird EditionMichael Lewis, Jeannette M.Haviland-Jones & Lisa FeldmanBarrett (Eds.) May 2008: 826ppHb: 978-1-59385-650-2 ISBN10: 1-59385-650-4: £64.50

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Top Row (From Left to Right): Affect in Social Thinking and Behavior, page 4; The Self-Conscious Emotions, see centre pages; Emotions in Social Psychology, page 5;Emotional Intelligence in Everyday Life, page 6; A Critique of Emotional Intelligence, page 7. Bottom Row: Linking Emotional Intelligence and Performance at Work, page7; Autobiographical Memory and Emotional Disorder, page 8; Emotions in Organizational Behavior, page 8; Emotion in Social Relations, page 9; The Regulation of Emotion,page 9. Front Cover: Cognition and Emotion, page 2; Psychology of Emotion, page 2; The Laws of Emotion, page 3; Applying Emotional Intelligence, page 5; HumanEmotions, page 8.

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