We Feel, Therefore We Learn: The Relevance of Affective and Social Neuroscience to Education
University of Southern California
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Abstract
ABSTRACT— Recent advances in neuroscience are highlighting connections between emotion, social functioning, and decision making that have the potential to revolutionize our understanding of the role of affect in education. In particular, the neurobiological evidence suggests that the aspects of cognition that we recruit most heavily in schools, namely learning, attention, memory, decision making, and social functioning, are both profoundly affected by and subsumed within the processes of emotion; we call these aspects emotional thought . Moreover, the evidence from brain‐damaged patients suggests the hypothesis that emotion‐related processes are required for skills and knowledge to be transferred from the…
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Authors
2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Psychology
- Relevance (law)
- Cognition
- Creativity
- Affect (linguistics)
- Action (physics)
- Cognitive psychology
- Social neuroscience
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