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Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, Vol. 16, No. 4, 665-675 (1990)
DOI: 10.1177/0146167290164007
© 1990 Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Inc.

Individual Differences in Physiological Arousal and Perception of Arousal

Missing Links in Jamesian Notions of Arousal-Based Behaviors

Jim Blascovich

State University of New York at Buffalo

The influence of James's theory of emotions on modern theories of social behavior has been pervasive. Major modifications in Jamesian notions have occurred as a function of methodological, empirical, and theoretical advances in the field of psychology. An expanded but essentially Jamesian arousal-cognition model of arousal-based behaviors is proposed and described briefly. This model takes account of recent advances in psychophysiological research focused on individual differences in stimuli-elicited arousal and the perception of arousal.


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Pers Soc Psychol BullHome page
E. J. Vanman, M. E. Dawson, and P. A. Brennan
Affective Reactions in the Blink of an Eye: Individual Differences in Subjective Experience and Physiological Responses to Emotional Stimuli
Pers Soc Psychol Bull, September 1, 1998; 24(9): 994 - 1005.
[Abstract]