In this paper, I develop the concept of by building on the recently established notion of . Affective arrangements bring together the more analytical research of situated affectivity with affect studies informed by cultural theory. As such, this concept takes a step past the usual synchronic understanding of situatedness toward an understanding of the social, dynamic, historical, and cultural situatedness of individuals in relation to situated affectivity. However, I argue that affective arrangements remain too narrow in their scope of analysis since their focus mainly lies on local, marked-off, and unique constellations of affect relations. They neglect the more mundane and day-to-day affect dynamics of social life. Hence, I introduce the notion of affective milieus, which brings to light the everyday, ubiquitous affective engagements of individuals with their socio-material surroundings. Affective milieus specifically call attention to how commonplace affect relations create territories in the social universe which form and mold individuals all the time. In that way, this paper apprehends and advances recent developments in the research on situated affectivity.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.611827 | DOI Listing |
Sleep Adv
December 2024
EPISTEME Research and Strategy, Brooklyn, NY, USA.
A central tenet of Freudian dream theory holds that there is thematic coherence within all dreams, even those containing scene and plot discontinuities. While other models support varying degrees of dream coherence, none address the question of how, or even whether, coherence can be identified in dreams with such discontinuities. Here, we objectively test the ability of judges to evaluate the coherence of individual dream narratives.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
December 2024
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21218, USA.
In sensory and mid-level regions of the brain, stimulus information is often topographically organized; functional responses are arranged in maps according to features such as retinal coordinates, auditory pitch, and object animacy or size. However, such organization is typically measured during stimulus input, e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFErgonomics
December 2024
Department of Psychology, Alma Mater Studiorum - University of Bologna, Bologna, Cesena, Italy.
Grounded on the Affective Event Theory and the Quality of Telework Model, this cross-sectional study examined the impact of perceived advantage of remote workstation on remote work performance and if this relationship is mediated through remote work intensity and moderated by worktime autonomy. The perceived advantage of remote workstation was operationalised as the arithmetical difference between perceived home office and in-site office workstation quality. A sample of 349 Italian researchers involved in hybrid work arrangements completed an online questionnaire.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnimals (Basel)
December 2024
Business Research Unit, ISCTE-Instituto Universitário de Lisboa, 1649-026 Lisboa, Portugal.
Work-pet family conflict has emerged as a novel form of work-life conflict, reflecting the increasingly significant role that pets play in modern families. Guided by role theory, work-pet family conflict is anticipated to produce outcomes similar to those of traditional work-life conflict. Accordingly, we developed a conceptual model to examine how work-pet family conflict affects employees' emotional exhaustion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeerJ
December 2024
Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, University of Rochester, Rochester, United States.
Many of the complex behaviours of humans involve the production of nonadjacent dependencies between sequence elements, which in part can be generated through the hierarchical organization of sequences. To understand how these structural properties of human behaviours evolved, we can gain valuable insight from studying the sequential behaviours of nonhuman animals. Among the behaviours of nonhuman apes, tool use has been hypothesised to be a domain of behaviour which likely involves hierarchical organization, and may therefore possess nonadjacent dependencies between sequential actions.
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