TABLES

1.1 Emotional expressions discussed by Darwin (1872), the bodily systems used, and the type of emotion that was expressed
1.2 Examples of effects found by Isen and her associates in which happiness was induced. In each study comparisons were made with effects of neutral and/or negative moods
1.3 Leading theorists' conceptions of emotion
2.1 Examples of adaptations
2.2 Ainsworth's (1967) list of attachment behaviors
2.3 Motivations, relations, recurring situations, and emotions
3.1 Two different self-construals. This table outlines the contrasting elements of the independent, individualist self, widespread in much of Northern Europe and North America, with the interdependent self, prominent in much of Asia, Africa, and South America
3.2 Comparison of evolutionary and cultural approaches
4.1 Accuracy rates for participants from New Guinea and the United States in judging photographs of six emotions. For the Fore judges (the first two columns), chance guessing would yield accuracy rates of 33%. For the U.S. college student judges, chance guessing would yield accuracy rates of 16.6%
4.2 Emotions as performed by actors, rasas, and English translations of them as aesthetic emotions that spectators may experience
5.1 Effects of the activation of the parasympathetic and sympathetic branches of the autonomic nervous system
5.2 Emotion-related changes in autonomic physiology observed in the directed facial action task
7.1 Emotions and core relational themes ...

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