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Tárgy: Online conference: Investigation of Conscious Emotion (fwd)
Dátum: 1999. január 21. 21:22
--------
Chris
maloney(a)U.Arizona.EDU
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 18 Jan 1999 20:34:36 -0700
From: "James M Laukes (by way of \"John J.B. Allen\"
<jallen(a)u.arizona.edu>)" <jlaukes(a)U.Arizona.EDU>
To: PSYCOLLOQ(a)LISTSERV.ARIZONA.EDU
Subject: Online conference: Investigation of Conscious Emotion
Please post or distribute as appropriate.
The Investigation of Conscious Emotion:
Combining First Person and Third Person Methodologies
February 22-March 5, 1999
An On-Line Conference
Sponsored By
Consciousness Studies
at The University of Arizona
and the Journal of Consciousness Studies
Open House and registration begins on February 1, 1999 at:
http://www.consciousness.arizona.edu/emotion.html
There is no cost to register. Access to the conference will require a
password which will be provided after registration.
Conference Leaders:
* Lis Nielsen, Psychology, University of Arizona
* Al Kaszniak, Psychology, Neurology and Psychiatry, University of Arizona
With Invited Commentaries By:
* Bernard Baars, Psychology, The Wright Institute, Berkeley, California
* David Chalmers, Philosophy, University of Arizona
* James Coan, Psychology, University of Arizona
* Jonathan Cole, Clinical Neurological Sciences, University of Southampton
* Craig DeLancey, Philosophy and Cognitive Science, Indiana University
* Natalie Depraz, Philosophy, CREA, Ecole Polytechnique, Paris, France
* David Galin, University of California, San Francisco
* Shaun Gallagher, Philosophy and Cognitive Science, Canisius College
* Marja Germans, Psychology, Vanderbilt University
* Leslie Greenberg, Psychology, York University, Ontario
* Valerie Gray Hardcastle, Philosophy, Virginia Tech
* Richard Lane, Psychiatry and Psychology, University of Arizona
* Bruce Mangan, Institute of Cognitive Studies, UC Berkeley
* Jaak Panksepp, Psychology, Bowling Green State University
* Michael Robinson, Psychology, University of Illinois
* Marilyn Schlitz, Director of Research, Institute of Noetic Sciences
* Jonathan Shear, Philosophy, Virginia Commonwealth University
* Heather Urry, Psychology, University of Arizona
* Francisco Varela, Cognitive Neuroscience, Paris, France
* Max Velmans, Psychology, University of London
* Pierre Vermersch, CNRS, GREX, Saint-Elbe, France
* Doug Watt, Director of Neuropsychology, Quincy Hospital, Quincy, MA
Overall Focus of the Conference:
The field of emotion research examines a class of mental phenomena for
which a main component is the conscious experience of emotion. Due to
difficulties inherent in rendering first person subjective experience
measures amenable to scientific interpretation, our current
understanding of the experiential component of emotion remains limited.
Open-ended verbal response format procedures have had the advantage
of allowing description of an emotional experience with whatever words
seem to best capture it. However, the resulting narratives can be
difficult to adequately categorize and quantify. Fixed response format
approaches are more easily quantified, but rest on a priori
assumptions about what comprises the domain of emotional experience.
When these subjective measures are linked to third person behavioral and
physiological measures interesting correlations have been found.
But what do these correlations tell us? Do they suggest a functional role
for the conscious experience of emotion? Does the subjective experience of
emotion play an important role in the development of a sense of self,
in social communication, in emotional regulation, or in other forms
of complex cognitive processing? Or is the experiential component
of emotion a mere epiphenomenon?
As investigators of emotion begin to tackle questions at the interface of
emotion, neuroscience, and consciousness studies, new methodologies may be
required. This on-line workshop will focus on methodological issues facing
emotion researchers in particular, and investigators of consciousness in
general, who are interested in understanding role of experience in our
mental life.
Conference Outline
Week One, February 22-26
Methodological Proposals in Consciousness Studies
(February 22-23)
Researchers in a variety of disciplines have outlined broad methodological
strategies for approaching the scientific study of consciousness. Common
among a number of these is a concern to take subjective reports
seriously as a valid source of information about consciousness.
First Person Methods in Emotion Research
(February 23-25)
Emotion is a complex psychological construct that evades simple definition.
However, many researchers will agree that emotions involve several
components, including physiological arousal, overt or expressive behavior,
cognitive appraisal, and subjective experience. Current research programs
incorporate measures of experience in a variety of ways:
Considered as true "measures of experience," how do the various approaches
"measure up"? What are the particular strengths and weaknesses of the
various approaches? What are the built-in assumptions of each?
Arguments against Introspection
(February 25-26)
How fatal are the arguments against introspectionism to any attempts to
integrate phenomenal data in empirical research on consciousness?
Week Two: March 1-5
Re-thinking Our Approach to Experiential Phenomena
(March 1-3)
Perhaps acceptance of phenomenological data as a valid component to
experimental studies in its own right will not come from arguments about
the validity of introspective data. Instead, such acceptance might
come through the consistent demonstration that emotional experience
has an important functional role (e.g., in cognitive activity, in
social behavior, in mediating physiological responses to emotional events).
Such an approach will require that we continue to evaluate our measures of
experience and get better at understanding the dimensions along which
experiences can vary and the types of laboratory situations that
are conducive to the elicitation of emotional experiences.
New Methodologies: Evoking Experience and Measuring Experience
(March 3-5)
Participants discuss current and future approaches.
System Requirements:
In preparation for the conference, please be sure that you have a reasonably
current web browser. Your web browser's version number should be
available under its Help..About.. menus. We strongly recommend a minimum of
either Internet Explorer 4 or Netscape Communicator 4. You must have at least
Internet Explorer 3.0 or Netscape Communicator 3.0.
If your browser is an earlier version, please visit
http://www.consciousness.arizona.edu/modernsci/contSysReq.html. We have
posted the system requirements for each browser version and links to places
within Microsoft and Netscape where you can download a newer browser.