From physiology to experience: enriching existing conceptions of "arousal" in affective science
Colombetti, G; Harrison, NA
Date: 30 November 2018
Book chapter
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Publisher DOI
Abstract
We examine the notion of “arousal”, an influential notion in affective science referring
to the degree of an individual’s “activation” or “excitement” during an emotional state.
We examine this notion specifically in relation to interoception, defined broadly as
“sensitivity to stimuli arising inside the organism”. We first distinguish ...
We examine the notion of “arousal”, an influential notion in affective science referring
to the degree of an individual’s “activation” or “excitement” during an emotional state.
We examine this notion specifically in relation to interoception, defined broadly as
“sensitivity to stimuli arising inside the organism”. We first distinguish “physiological
arousal” from “experienced arousal” and argue that both need to be characterised
more broadly than commonly done. Physiological arousal does not reduce to
sympathetic activation, as it involves complex interactions between multiple
functionally distinct pathways within sympathetic and parasympathetic divisions of
the autonomic nervous system, as well as endocrine and immune systems, and even
the gut microbiota. Relatedly, experienced arousal does not reduce to the perception
of changes in the body sensed by visceral afferents in response to autonomic
nervous system activity, but also includes humorally mediated interoceptive
pathways, somatic sensations of various kinds, and “background” bodily feelings
Social and Political Sciences, Philosophy, and Anthropology
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
Item views 0
Full item downloads 0