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International Handbook of Anger: Constituent and Concomitant Biological, Psychological, and Social Processes

Editat de Michael Potegal, Gerhard Stemmler, Charles Spielberger
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 24 feb 2010
Book covers a broader range of topics than other books in this area. Notably, extensive coverage of the neurobiology of anger in context of psychology and sociology is unique.
Book provides broad, integrative coverage while avoiding unnecessary duplication. Contributors have read each others’ chapters and there is extensive cross-referencing from chapter to chapter.
Book contains a guide to content and organization of chapters and topics, along with interpolated commentary at the end of each section.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780387896755
ISBN-10: 0387896759
Pagini: 590
Ilustrații: XIV, 590 p.
Dimensiuni: 178 x 254 x 33 mm
Greutate: 2.78 kg
Ediția:2010
Editura: Springer
Colecția Springer
Locul publicării:New York, NY, United States

Public țintă

Professional/practitioner

Descriere

From the individual rage-driven violence of domestic abuse to the destructive causes and lasting consequences of large scale ethnic and political conflict, anger and its effects are ubiquitous in human life, and are the focus of intense study across many scientific disciplines: fields as varied as affective neuroscience, health science, psychology, psychophysiology, and sociology have all contributed to recent advances in the understanding of anger. The editors of the International Handbook of Anger bring these major contributions together for a unique portrayal of the many aspects of anger—evolutionary and biological bases, behavioral processes and effects, physiological concomitants, clinical aspects, and role in the larger social picture—with coverage that is both wide-ranging and integrative. State-of-the-art findings by highly regarded experts are organized for maximum utility, with extensive cross-referencing between chapters and editors’ introductory commentary linking the book’s sections.
A sampling of the coverage in the Handbook:
  • Historical views and roles of anger in Western and nonwestern cultures.
  • Current genetic, neurological, neurochemical, and psychophysiological perspectives.
  • Cross-cultural expressions: facial, vocal, and linguistic.
  • Affective, motivational, and cognitive processes in anger.
  • Gender differences in anger triggers, experience, and behavior.
  • Anger in development and across the lifespan: Infancy, childhood and adulthood
  • Assessing anger, hostility, and anger control.
  • Clinical aspects: psychopathology, anger and chronic pain, "Type A" behavior and cardiovascular health.
  • Anger in family, small-group, and large-group conflict.
The International Handbook of Anger presents a wealth of deep and detailed knowledge relevant to clinical and health psychology, social work, family studies, and anger management, among other fields. Its depth and breadth of coverage will make it a definitive volume informing research and practice in the years ahead.

Cuprins

Cross-Disciplinary Views of Anger: Consensus and Controversy.- A Brief History of Anger.- Biology of Anger.- Population and Molecular Genetics of Anger and Aggression: Current State of the Art.- Constructing a Neurology of Anger.- Anger, Motivation, and Asymmetrical Frontal Cortical Activations.- The Neurochemistry and Psychopharmacology of Anger.- Somatovisceral Activation During Anger.- Cross Cultural Expressions and Experience of Anger.- The Expression of Anger Across Cultures.- Vocal Expressions of Anger.- Cross-Cultural Experience of Anger: A Psycholinguistic Analysis.- Anger in Child Development.- The Development of Anger.- Anger in Children’s Tantrums: A New, Quantitative, Behaviorally Based Model.- The Development of Anger from Preschool to Middle Childhood: Expressing, Understanding, and Regulating Anger.- Anger and the Reactive–Proactive Aggression Distinction in Childhood and Adolescence.- Appraisal and Information Processing in Anger.- Why Do I Get Angry? A Componential Appraisal Approach.- Appraisals and Anger: How Complete Are the Usual Appraisal Accounts of Anger?.- Fuel in the Fire: How Anger Impacts Judgment and Decision-Making.- State and Trait Anger, Fear, and Social Information Processing.- Lifespan Changes and Gender Differences in Anger.- The Sociological Study of Anger: Basic Social Patterns and Contexts.- Anger in the Context of Gender.- Madmen: An Evolutionary Perspective on Anger and Men’s Violent Responses to Transgression.- Time Course of Anger: State, Trait and the Persistence of Vengefulness.- The Temporal Dynamics of Anger: Phenomena, Processes, and Perplexities.- The Nature and Measurement of Anger.- “Righteous” Anger and Revenge in the Workplace: The Fantasies, the Feuds, the Forgiveness.- Clinical Aspects of Anger.- Anger/Hostility and Cardiovascular Disease.- The Anger of Pain Sufferers: Attributions to Agents and Appraisals of Wrongdoings.- Anger and Psychopathology.- Toward an Integrative Psychotherapy for Maladaptive Anger.- Conflict and Anger in Family, Workplace, and Community.- The Contribution of Child Anger and Fear, and Parental Discipline to Early Antisocial Behavior: An Integrative Model.- Anger in Intimate Relationships.- Don’t Worry, Be Angry? Effects of Anger on Feelings, Thoughts, and Actions in Conflict and Negotiation.- Anger, Violence, and Political Science.

Recenzii

From the reviews:
“The editors of this large, lengthy, and (for the most part) lively book … have done an excellent job of drawing together respected scholar­–researchers in different areas of psychology and related disciplines (e.g., sociology, political science) to present contemporary perspectives on this dynamic and influential emotion. … There are 32 chapters, each of which has an abstract to orient the reader. … References are helpfully placed at the end of chapters … . Researchers, teachers, and students of emotion should certainly read this book.” (Dana S. Dunn, PsycCRITIQUES, Vol. 55 (39), September, 2010)
“The purpose of the handbook is to ‘review state-of-the-art research on anger across a number of academic disciplines, including affective neuroscience, business administration, epidemiology, health science, linguistics, political science, psychology, psychophysiology, and sociology.’ … The International Handbook of Anger is a tour de force for the academic community and advanced readers seeking to stay current with research findings and trends across multiple disciplines. … is a vital contribution and seminal text that I anticipate will educate, inform, and stimulate thinking for years to come.” (James K. Luiselli, Journal of Child and Family Studies, Vol. 20, 2011)

Notă biografică

Michael Potegal, Ph.D., L.P. is Associate Professor of Pediatrics and Neurology at the University of Minnesota Medical School. He received his Ph.D. in Physiological Psychology from MIT in 1969 and held Postdoctoral Fellowships in neurophysiology at the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons and the University of Amsterdam (the Netherlands). Prior positions include Research Scientist at the N.Y. State Psychiatric Institute and NRC Senior Resident Research Associate in the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research. Prof. Potegal has served as Program Chair (1986) and host (2006) of the biennial meetings of International Society for Research on Aggression (ISRA), as ISRA’s representative at the U.N., as ISRA Council member, and as Chair of the Young Investigators Program.
In 1993, Prof. Potegal integrated research and clinical interests by clinical training as a Pediatric Neuropsychologist, first at the University of Wisconsin and then at the University of Minnesota. He has received numerous university, foundation, federal and international grant awards, has participated in NICHHD review groups, and has published 75 papers and edited three books. After early studies on egocentric localization and vestibulo-spatial functions of the caudate nucleus, his research has focused on the time course and neural mechanisms of anger and aggression, most recently in children’s tantrums. Recurrent themes in Prof. Potegal’s research include the internal mechanisms that drive external aggressive behaviors and the cross species similarity of these mechanisms in humans and other animals.
Gerhard Stemmler, Ph.D. earned his degree in 1984 at the University of Hamburg. After professorships at the University of Freiburg, he became full professor of Personality Psychology at University of Marburg (Germany) in 1994. Prof Stemmler has served as Dean of the Faculty of Psychology (1995-1996, 2004-2006), President of the German Psychophysiological Society (1996-1997) and Speaker of the Section for Personality Psychology and Psychological Assessment in the German Society of Psychology (2002-2004). His studies of the psychobiology of emotion and personality have identified physiological influences on self-reported experiences and observed behaviors using approaches involving genetic polymorphisms, somatovisceral psychophysiology, and EEG characteristics. In the emotion domain, his work addresses psychophysiological specificity (e.g., anger vs. fear; expectancy-wanting vs. warmth-liking) and strategies of emotion regulation. He has also done work on conflicts in motivational behavior tendencies. Within the personality domain, Prof Stemmler’s recent research addresses agentic extraversion and the effects of dopaminergic neurotransmission on behavior facilitation, positive emotionality, and working memory.
Charles D. Spielberger, Ph.D., ABPP is Distinguished Research Professor of Psychology and Director of the Center for Research in Behavioral Medicine and Health Psychology at the University of South Florida, where he has been on faculty since 1972. He previously directed the USF Doctoral Program in Clinical Psychology, and was a tenured faculty member at Duke (1955-62), Vanderbilt (1963-66), and Florida State University (1967-72). Prof Spielberger is author, co-author or editor of more than 400 professional publications, including 6 books on the theory and evaluation of anxiety in sports, education and across cultures. His State-Trait Anger EXpression Inventory (1988, 1999) is widely used while his State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (1970, 1983) is a standard international measure with translations in 72 languages and dialects. He is also author of anxiety inventories and surveys for children, tests, and job stress. His research contributions have been recognized in awards from the American Psychological Association (1993), the APA Divisions of Clinical, Community, and International Psychology, the Florida Psychological Association (1977, 1988), the Society for Personality Assessment (1990), and the Lifetime Achievement Award of the International STress and Anxiety Research Society (STAR, 1998). Prof. Spielberger served as president of the American Psychological Association (1991-1992), the International Assoc. of Applied Psychology (1998-2002), and the International Stress Management Assoc. (1992-2000), as well as six other professional psychology organizations and four APA Divisions. He has chaired the National Council of Scientific Society Presidents (1996-97) and the International Psychology Committee of the National Academy of Science (1996-2000) as well as five APA national committees. Prof. Spielbergers’s current research focuses on: curiosity, anxiety, depression, and the experience, expression and control of anger; job stress and stress management; and the effects of stress, emotions and lifestyle factors on the etiology and progression of hypertension, cardiovascular disorders and cancer.

Textul de pe ultima copertă

International Handbook of Anger
Constituent and Concomitant Biological, Psychological, and Social Processes
Edited by Michael Potegal, University of Minnesota Medical Center
Gerhard Stemmler, Philipps-Universitat, Marburg, Germany
Charles Spielberger, University of South Florida
 
From the individual rage-driven violence of domestic abuse to the destructive causes and lasting consequences of large scale ethnic and political conflict, anger and its effects are ubiquitous in human life, and are the focus of intense study across many scientific disciplines: fields as varied as affective neuroscience, health science, psychology, psychophysiology, and sociology have all contributed to recent advances in the understanding of anger. The editors of the International Handbook of Anger bring these major contributions together for a unique portrayal of the many aspects of anger—evolutionary and biological bases, behavioral processes and effects, physiological concomitants, clinical aspects, and role in the larger social picture—with coverage that is both wide-ranging and integrative. State-of-the-art findings by highly regarded experts are organized for maximum utility, with extensive cross-referencing between chapters and editors’ introductory commentary linking the book’s sections.
A sampling of the coverage in the Handbook:
  • Historical views and roles of anger in Western and nonwestern cultures.
  • Current genetic, neurological, neurochemical, and psychophysiological perspectives.
  • Cross-cultural expressions: facial, vocal, and linguistic.
  • Affective, motivational, and cognitive processes in anger.
  • Gender differences in anger triggers, experience, and behavior.
  • Anger in development and across the lifespan: Infancy, childhood and adulthood
  • Assessing anger, hostility, and anger control.
  • Clinical aspects: psychopathology, anger and chronic pain, "Type A" behavior and cardiovascular health.
  • Anger in family, small-group, and large-group conflict.
The International Handbook of Anger presents a wealth of deep and detailed knowledge relevant to clinical and health psychology, social work, family studies, and anger management, among other fields. Its depth and breadth of coverage will make it a definitive volume informing research and practice in the years ahead.

Caracteristici

An international roster of contributors cover a broader range of topics than other books in this area
Notably, extensive coverage of the neurobiology of anger in context of psychology and sociology is unique
Provides broad, integrative coverage while avoiding unnecessary duplication
Contributors have read each others’ chapters and there is extensive cross-referencing from chapter to chapter
Contains a guide to content and organization of chapters and topics, along with interpolated commentary at the end of each section
Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras