Title: Hot%20Thought:%20Mechanisms%20of%20Emotional%20Cognition
1Hot Thought Mechanisms of Emotional Cognition
- Paul Thagard
- pthagard_at_uwaterloo.ca
2Thanks to
- Tom Ward and Lisa Neal
- Collaborators
- Chris Eliasmith
- Fred Kroon
- Abninder Litt
- Baljinder Sahdra
- Cameron Shelley
- Brandon Wagar, and others.
- Natural Sciences and Engineering Council of Canada
3Outline
- Emotional cognition
- Mechanisms
- Cognitive model
- Social model
- Neural models
- Integrations
- Conclusions
4Individual Decisions
5Decision Making is Emotional
- Slovic et al Affect heuristic.
- Loewenstein et al Risk as feelings.
- Damasio Somatic markers.
- Mellers Emotion-based choice.
- Etc.
6Emotion in Science
- 1953 DNA
- 1968 Watson publishes The Double Helix
- 143 pages
- 235 emotion words
7Watsons Emotions
8Emotions in Scientific Thinking
beauty happiness
happiness hope
happiness surprise
interest curiosity wonder
Generate questions
Try to answer questions
Generate answers
Evaluate answers
fear anger frustration
avoid boredom
worry
disappointment
9Emotion in Law
- 1994 Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman
murdered. - 1995 O. J. Simpson found not guilty.
- 1996 civil trial finds O. J. guilty.
- Acquittal result of emotional coherence.
10Mechanistic Explanations
Mechanism Parts Relations Changes
Social people associate, communicate influence, decisions
Cognitive mental representations implications, associations mental processes
Neural neurons excitation, inhibition activations, synaptic
Molecular proteins physical connections chemical reactions
11Cognitive Mechanism HOTCO
- Beliefs and goals are represented by nodes in a
connectionist network. - Nodes have activations representing degree of
acceptance, but also valences representing
emotional value. - Activations and valences spread through the
network until a stable conclusion is reached.
12Why O.J. Was Acquitted
Solid lines are excitatory links dotted lines
are inhibitory.
13Applications of HOTCO
- OJ
- Experiment by Sinclair Kunda on motivated
stereotypes. - Experiments by Westen et al. on motivated
inference in politics. - For details see Thagard in Cognition and Emotion,
2003.
14Social Mechanism HOTCO 3
- Group decisions are sometimes based on emotional
consensus. - Consensus arises in part from emotional
communication - Contagion (includes attachment)
- Altruism (includes compassion)
- Means-ends
- Empathy
- Analogy
15HOTCO 3
- Individuals are HOTCO 2 processes.
- Emotional communication takes place by transfer
of emotions between individuals. - Consensus sometimes reached
- Couple deciding on movie.
- Academic department hiring decision.
- Thagard and Kroon, Mind and Society,
forthcoming.
16Neural Mechanism
- GAGE model Wagar Thagard,
- Psychological Review, 2004.
- Brain areas amygdala, hippocampus, nucleus
accumbens, ventromedial prefrontal cortex.
VMPFC
Amg
Somatic state
HC
VTA
NAc
To Action/ Overt
17Applications of GAGE
- Phineas Gage.
- Behavior of Damasios patients with VMPFC damage
on the Iowa gambling task. - Effects of context on emotion in Schacter
Singer.
18Relation of GAGE and HOTCO
- GAGE is more neurologically realistic
- Spiking neurons.
- Anatomically organized.
- But HOTCO can be viewed as an approximation to
GAGE - Units encoded by neuronal groups.
- Activations encoded by spiking behavior of groups
of neurons. - Valences encoded by spiking in emotional brain
areas such as the amygdala.
19New Neural Model
- Litt, Eliasmith, and Thagard Why Losses Loom
Larger than Gains, in progress. - Uses Neural Engineering framework.
- Models loss aversion in decision making.
- Adds more brain areas relevant to emotional
cognition. - Future applications
- other neuroeconomics applications.
- social cognitive neuroscience.
20Abbreviations 5-HTRD, raphe dorsalis
serotonergic neurons ACC, anterior cingulate
cortex AMYG, amygdala DAmid, midbrain
dopaminergic neurons DLPFC, dorsolateral
prefrontal cortex OFC, orbitofrontal cortex VS,
ventral striatum.
21Molecular Mechanisms
- Happiness dopamine.
- Sadness serotonin.
- Fear cortisol.
- Love oxytocin, vasopressin.
- Thagard How molecules matter to mental
computation, Philosophy of Science, 2002. - Lower level mechanisms? - no. See Litt et al.,
Is the brain a quantum computer?, Cognitive
Science, forthcoming.
22Research Strategy
- Develop models of mechanisms at all relevant
levels. - Integrate models by relating
- parts decompose from higher to lower.
- relations decompose if possible.
- changes show how higher changes result in part
from lower changes, but go in other direction
too. - Full reduction is rarely possible pluralistic
reductionism.
23Normative Philosophical Issues
- HOTCO explains motivated inference.
- GAGE models explains weakness of will.
- Normative claim Rationality requires removal
of emotion from cognition. But - Removal is neurologically impossible.
- Not desirable lose motivation for science, etc.
- Need other strategies for ensuring that emotion
influences cognition positively. - Informed intuition social constraints.
24Conclusions
- Cognition is emotional.
- Mechanisms operate at four levels social,
cognitive, neural, molecular. - Mechanisms can be integrated and evaluated.
- Web cogsci.uwaterloo.ca
- Book Hot Thought, MIT Press, 2006.