Posted on Feb 21, 2017 | Rating
   
  

Multiple Arousal Theory and EDA Asymmetry

by , ,

Using "big data" from sensors worn continuously outside the lab, researchers have observed patterns of objective physiology that challenge some of the long-standing theoretical concepts of emotion and its measurement. One challenge is that emotional arousal, when measured as sympathetic nervous system activation through electrodermal activity, can sometimes differ significantly across the two halves of the upper body. We show that traditional measures on only one side may lead to misjudgment of arousal. This article presents daily life and controlled study data, as well as existing evidence from neuroscience, supporting the influence of multiple emotional substrates in the brain causing innervation on different sides of the body. We describe how a theory of multiple arousals explains the asymmetric EDA findings.

WP-02

Date of Publication:
30 November -0001

Year of Publication:
2015

@article{sensecare:506,
  • author = {Rosalind W. Picard and Szymon Fedor and Yadid Ayzenberg},
  • title = {Multiple Arousal Theory and EDA Asymmetry},
  • year = {2015},
  • date = {November 30, -0001},
}
Rosalind W. Picard and Szymon Fedor and Yadid Ayzenberg 2015 Multiple Arousal Theory and EDA Asymmetry November 30, -0001

Click on the link under to view document:

Workpackages WP2 Affective Computing (AC) & Machine Learning

Related Articles

Document
Multiple Arousal Theory Picard Commentaries
Rosalind W. Picard, Szymon Fedor, Yadid Ayzenberg

Document
Affective Sensors, Privacy, and Ethical Contracts
Carson Reynolds, Rosalind W. Picard

Document
MIT Media Lab AC Current and Past Project
MIT researchers led by Rosalind Picard researchers led by

Document
Empatica E4 EDA Explained
Empatica

Document
ACM Physiological Computing and BCI
Erin Treacy Solovey, Daniel Afergan, Evan M. Peck, Samuel W. Hincks, Robert J. K. Jacob



Document
Dynamic Emotion Wheel_ Emotion Self-Report and Awareness Tool
Swiss Centre for Affective Sciences for

Document
The Center for the Study of Emotion and Attention VITAL
Dr. Peter J. Lang, Ph.D, University of Florida of

Document
Face and emotion processing in frontal variant frontotemporal dementia
Jill Keane, Andrew J. Calder, John R. Hodges, Andrew W. Young
×