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Journal Article

Citation

Cobos P, Sánchez M, Pérez N, Vila J. Cogn. Emot. 2004; 18(2): 281-287.

Affiliation

Granada University, Spain.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2004, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/02699930244000471

PMID

29148308

Abstract

Responses to a structured interview by 19 patients with spinal cord injuries (SCI) (7 women and 12 men) concerning their past (pre-injury) and present emotions were analysed and compared with responses by 19 SCI-free controls matched for sex, age, and education. In addition, subjects assessed the valence and arousal of 10 pleasant, 10 neutral, and 10 unpleasant pictures selected from the International Affective Picture System. The results indicate that there is no decrease in emotional experience among individuals with SCI compared with those without. For all the emotional scales (joy, love, sentimentalism, positive emotions as a whole, fear, anger, sadness, and negative emotions as a whole) the SCI group always showed either no change or an increase; this increase was significantly higher in SCI than in control subjects for sadness. No differences were observed between the two groups in the subjective assessment of the pictures. The implications of the results for the James versus Cannon controversy on the theory of emotions are discussed.


Language: en

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