| Version | Summary | Created by | Modification | Content Size | Created at | Operation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Peter Walla | -- | 623 | 2025-08-08 00:09:47 | | | |
| 2 | Catherine Yang | -1 word(s) | 622 | 2025-08-08 02:59:18 | | |
The Walla Emotion Model provides a distinct perspective on the often-interchangeable terms used in emotion research: affective processing, feelings, and emotions. The primary aim is to establish clearer, more neurobiologically grounded definitions to facilitate more precise research and understanding.
Affective Processing: This is the most fundamental level. It is defined as the rapid, unconscious, neural evaluation of stimuli based on their valence (pleasantness/unpleasantness) and arousal (intensity). This occurs in older, subcortical brain regions (limbic system) and is believed to be an evolutionary ancient mechanism that guides initial behavioral tendencies (e.g., approach or avoidance) before conscious awareness kicks in. It's the "brain knowing" something is good or bad, dangerous or safe, even before "you" consciously realize it.
Feelings: These are the conscious, subjective experiences that arise from suprathreshold affective processing. They are the felt internal bodily responses that we become aware of, such as a racing heart, a knot in the stomach, a sense of warmth, or a feeling of unease. If you "feel" fear, that is the feeling. This conscious experience is still distinct from how you outwardly express it. It is suggested that concepts like "love" and "hate" are feelings, not emotions in my specific definition.
Emotions: This is where the Walla - Emotion Model becomes particularly distinctive. "Emotions" are defined as the behavioral outputs or expressions that communicate feelings to others. These are observable actions like facial expressions (a "scared face" rather than fear itself), vocalizations (a gasp), or body language. In this model, an emotion is a signal to the external world, not an internal state or processing. For instance, if someone is experiencing fear (a feeling), their "scared face" is the emotion.
Despite potential debates, Walla's model has significant applications, particularly in fields where understanding rapid, unconscious responses is critical:
In summary, the Walla - Emotion Model offers a distinct and rigorous framework for understanding affective neuroscience, emphasizing the foundational role of unconscious affective processing and drawing clear lines between it, conscious feelings, and observable emotional expressions.