The autonomic differentiation of emotions revisited: convergent and discriminant validation.

The convergent and discriminant validity of three models of physiological emotion specificity were compared. Forty-two female students served as subjects in a 2 (Context of emotional inductions: real-life, imagery) X 3 (Emotion: fear, anger, control) +1 (Happiness induced in real-life context) repeated measures design. The dependent measures included self-reports of emotion, Gottschalk-Gleser affect scores, back and forearm extensor EMG activity, body movements, heart period, respiration period, skin conductance, skin temperatures, pulse transit time, pulse volume amplitude, and blood volumes. Self-report data confirmed the generation of affective states in both contexts, as intended. Planned multivariate comparisons between physiological profiles established discriminant validity for fear and anger in the real-life context, whereas under imagery, emotion profiles were essentially equal. Convergent validity could not be substantiated. Implications for models of physiological specificity of emotion were discussed.

[1]  G. Schwartz,et al.  Facial muscle patterning and subjective experience during affective imagery: sex differences. , 1980, Psychophysiology.

[2]  D. Funkenstein NOR‐EPINEPHRINE-LIKE AND EPINEPHRINE‐LIKE SUBSTANCES IN RELATION TO HUMAN BEHAVIOR , 1956, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.

[3]  R. Moos,et al.  The generality of specificity. , 1967, Archives of general psychiatry.

[4]  P. Ekman,et al.  Autonomic nervous system activity distinguishes among emotions. , 1983, Science.

[5]  Andrew J. Tomarken,et al.  Emotion: Today's problems. , 1986 .

[6]  E. Gellhorn The emotions and the ergotropic and trophotropic systems , 1970, Psychologische Forschung.

[7]  W. G. Reese,et al.  Physiological Reactivity to Different Stressors and Methods of Evaluation , 1963 .

[8]  D. Carroll,et al.  Psychophysiological changes accompanying different types of arousing and relaxing imagery. , 1982, Psychophysiology.

[9]  Stanley Schachter,et al.  Chapter 18 – Cognition and Peripheralist—Centralist Controversies in Motivation and Emotion , 1975 .

[10]  J. Schachter Pain, Fear, and Anger in Hypertensives and Normotensives: A Psychophysiological Study , 1957, Psychosomatic medicine.

[11]  G. Schwartz,et al.  Patterns of emotional responses to affective situations: Relations among happiness, sadness, anger, fear, depression, and anxiety , 1980 .

[12]  Peter J. Lang,et al.  A Bio‐Informational Theory of Emotional Imagery , 1979 .

[13]  R. J. Roberts,et al.  Cardiovascular Responding during Anger and Fear Imagery , 1982, Psychological reports.

[14]  I. Goldstein,et al.  The specificity of response to stressful stimuli. A comparison of two stressors. , 1966, Archives of general psychiatry.

[15]  B. Houston,et al.  Finger pulse volume as a measure of anxiety in response to evaluative threat. , 1984, Psychophysiology.

[16]  W. James II.—WHAT IS AN EMOTION ? , 1884 .

[17]  D. Campbell,et al.  Convergent and discriminant validation by the multitrait-multimethod matrix. , 1959, Psychological bulletin.

[18]  D. Tucker Lateral brain function, emotion, and conceptualization. , 1981, Psychological bulletin.

[19]  M N Cheung,et al.  Detection of and recovery from errors in cardiac interbeat intervals. , 1981, Psychophysiology.

[20]  H. Leventhal,et al.  A Perceptual-Motor Processing Model of Emotion , 1979 .

[21]  W. Boucsein,et al.  [Physiological and psychological effects of failure stress with reference to the trait repression-sensitization]. , 1974, Zeitschrift fur experimentelle und angewandte Psychologie.

[22]  R. Chessick,et al.  A comparison of the effect of infused catecholamines and certain affect states. , 1966, The American journal of psychiatry.

[23]  G. Stemmler Effects of Profile Elevation, Scatter, and Shape on Discriminant Analysis Results , 1988 .

[24]  G. A. Miller,et al.  Fear behavior, fear imagery, and the psychophysiology of emotion: the problem of affective response integration. , 1983, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[25]  J. Laird The real role of facial response in the experience of emotion: A reply to Tourangeau and Ellsworth, and others. , 1984 .

[26]  A. Ax The Physiological Differentiation between Fear and Anger in Humans , 1953, Psychosomatic medicine.

[27]  Richard S. Lazarus,et al.  EMOTIONS: A COGNITIVE–PHENOMENOLOGICAL ANALYSIS , 1980 .

[28]  M. Kozak,et al.  Emotional processing of fear: exposure to corrective information. , 1986, Psychological bulletin.

[29]  J. M. Grossberg,et al.  Physiological changes accompanying the visualization of fearful and neutral situations. , 1968, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[30]  E. Doughtie,et al.  Induction of mood and mood shift. , 1980, Journal of clinical psychology.

[31]  A. Frodi Experiential and physiological responses associated with anger and aggression in women and men , 1978 .

[32]  J. Thayer,et al.  The continuing problem of false positives in repeated measures ANOVA in psychophysiology: a multivariate solution. , 1987, Psychophysiology.

[33]  A. J. Fridlund,et al.  Pattern recognition of self-reported emotional state from multiple-site facial EMG activity during affective imagery. , 1984, Psychophysiology.

[34]  J. Singer,et al.  Cardiovascular Differentiation of Happiness, Sadness, Anger, and Fear Following Imagery and Exercise1 , 1981, Psychosomatic medicine.

[35]  R. Davidson Specificity and patterning in biobehavioral systems. Implications for behavior change. , 1978, The American psychologist.

[36]  J. Fahrenberg Psychophysiological individuality: A pattern analytic approach to personality research and psychosomatic medicine , 1986 .

[37]  P. Ellsworth,et al.  The role of facial response in the experience of emotion. , 1979, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[38]  E Irrgang,et al.  [Effects of temperature on semiconductor photoelectric transducer and their elimination: reflection-photoplethysmograph as an example (author's transl)]. , 1981, Biomedizinische Technik. Biomedical engineering.

[39]  S. Epstein,et al.  Instigation to aggression as a function of degree of defeat and perceived aggressive intent of the opponent. , 1967, Journal of personality.