The I of the storm-relations between self and conscious emotion experience: comment on Lambie and Marcel (2002)

Psychological Review
Tim Dalgleish, Michael J Power

Abstract

J. A. Lambie and A. J. Marcel (2002) outlined a framework for understanding varieties of conscious emotion experience. In their analysis, the self plays an important role in conscious emotion experience. In this critique, however, the authors propose that Lambie and Marcel's presentation of the self needs further specification if it is to account for varieties of conflicted emotional experience, particularly those characteristic of dissociative states. The authors propose that a more elaborated self-construct is necessary to account for these phenomena involving either the "splitting off of significant self-related concerns or the existence of multiple self-constructs. These arguments are illustrated by clinical and subclinical case examples.

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Citations

Jan 12, 2011·Annual Review of Clinical Psychology·Chris R Brewin
Jul 15, 2004·Psychological Review·Anthony J Marcel, John A Lambie
Dec 19, 2006·Journal of Clinical Psychology·M J Power
Sep 17, 2005·Clinical Psychology Review·M J Power
Jun 23, 2004·Nature Reviews. Neuroscience·Tim Dalgleish
Jul 9, 2005·Current Opinion in Neurology·Stefan Wiens

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