Description
About the Author
Maria Miceli, a social psychologist with a background in philosophy, is a senior researcher at the Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies of the Italian National Research Council (ISTC-CNR) in Rome, where she is a member of the Goal-Oriented Agents Lab. Her research activity focuses on the cognitive aspects of social mechanisms and processes and their interplay with motivational and emotional components, and on modelling architectures of intelligent autonomous agents endowed with social capabilities. Topics of interest include: kinds and processes of evaluation; values; self-esteem and defense strategies; loneliness; dependence, help-giving and help-seeking; loss of motivation; helplessness and crying; guilt and guilt-inducement strategies; anticipation and related emotions; social comparison and related emotions; persuasion strategies, with special reference to emotional strategies; comfort as a special form of social support; forgiveness. Cristiano Castelfranchi is professor of economical psychology at the LUISS University in Rome (2007-present), and full professor of social psychology at the Uninettuno international telematic university (2008-present). He has been full professor of general psychology at the University of Siena (2001-2011), and director of the ISTC-CNR in Rome (2002-2011), where he is presently coordinator of the Goal-Oriented Agents Lab. A cognitive scientist with a background in linguistics and psychology, he is also active in the multi-agent systems and social simulation communities. He introduced the study of goal-directed action and normative behavior in distributed artificial intelligence, and at the same time championed the use of the autonomous agents paradigm and social simulation in cognitive psychology and social science.
Reviews
In all my years of thinking about the various types of emotions and how best to characterize their differences, as well as my thinking about the nature of surprise, I have never been able to be as insightful, as profound, and as rigorous as these two authors are in this book. What they have done is not only unique, it is brilliant. As I read it, I stopped worrying about whether I agreed with them that this or that mental state is or isn't an emotion. Instead, I realized that sometimes it doesn't matter-that what matters is that there is a family of interesting and psychologically important, related states that we need to understand, regardless of how we categorize them. To make a die-hard purist like me ignore my prejudices is quite an achievement, and yet I feel all the better for it-indeed, almost liberated! Quite simply, this is wonderful, compelling book for which I heartily congratulate my friends, the authors. I loved reading it; I wish I had written it. * Andrew Ortony *
Book Information
ISBN 9780199685868
Author Maria Miceli
Format Hardback
Page Count 278
Imprint Oxford University Press
Publisher Oxford University Press
Weight(grams) 1g
Dimensions(mm) 248mm * 177mm * 21mm