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How emotion shapes behavior: Feedback, anticipation, and reflection, rather than direct causation

Journal

PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY REVIEW
Volume 11, Issue 2, Pages 167-203

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1088868307301033

Keywords

social cognition; automatic/implicit processes; emotion

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Fear causes fleeing and thereby saves lives: this exemplifies a popular and common sense but increasingly untenable view that the direct causation of behavior is the primary function of emotion. Instead, the authors develop a theory of emotion as a feedback system whose influence on behavior is typically indirect. By providing feedback and stimulating retrospective appraisal of actions, conscious emotional states can promote learning and alter guidelines for future behavior. Behavior may also be chosen to pursue (or avoid) anticipated emotional outcomes. Rapid, automatic affective responses, in contrast to the full-blown conscious emotions, may inform cognition and behavioral choice and thereby help guide current behavior. The automatic affective responses may also remind the person of past emotional outcomes and provide useful guides as to what emotional outcomes may be anticipated in the present. To justify replacing the direct causation model with the feedback model, the authors review a large body of empirical findings.

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