Emotional Response
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A Emotional Response is an internal response that represents a person's psychological reaction to experiential stimuli through feeling expression.
- Context:
- It can (typically) involve Physical Response through body sensations, neural activation, and hormonal change.
- It can (typically) affect Mental State through thought patterns, attention focus, and cognitive process.
- It can (typically) influence Behavioral Output through action tendency, expression pattern, and response habit.
- It can (typically) shape Memory Formation through experience encoding, emotional tagging, and recall probability.
- ...
- It can (often) trigger Social Signal through facial expression, vocal tone, and body language.
- It can (often) impact Decision Making through judgment bias, risk assessment, and choice preference.
- It can (often) generate Coping Pattern through regulation strategy, adaptation method, and management approach.
- ...
- It can range from being a Mild Emotion to being an Intense Emotion, depending on its activation level.
- It can range from being a Simple Emotion to being a Complex Emotion, depending on its cognitive integration.
- It can range from being a Brief Emotion to being a Sustained Emotion, depending on its temporal duration.
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- It can be influenced by personal history through past experiences, learned associations, and memory patterns.
- It can be shaped by cultural context through display rules, value systems, and expression norms.
- It can affect interpersonal dynamics through emotional contagion, social synchrony, and relationship patterns.
- ...
- Examples:
- Basic Emotional Responses, such as:
- Joy Response for positive experience.
- Fear Response for threat detection.
- Anger Response for boundary violation.
- Complex Emotional Responses, such as:
- Pride Response for achievement recognition.
- Grief Response for loss processing.
- Love Response for attachment formation.
- Social Emotional Responses, such as:
- Empathy Response for connection building.
- Shame Response for norm violation.
- Gratitude Response for benefit reception.
- ...
- Basic Emotional Responses, such as:
- Counter-Examples:
- Logical Responses, which prioritize rational analysis over feeling states.
- Reflexive Responses, which lack emotional processing.
- Programmed Responses, which lack emotional authenticity.
- Mechanical Responses, which lack feeling components.
- ...
- See: Psychological Response, Feeling State, Emotional Intelligence, Affective Process, Behavioral Response.