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Expressive Order : Confirming Sentiments in Social Actions
David R. Heise
- 01 Jan 2007
353
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a broad overview of the history of affect control theory and its application in the field of social science, as well as a review of the current state of the art.
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Abstract: Preface- Part I Affect Control Theory, Plainly Told- Introduction - Affect control theory- Utility of the Theory - Overview of the Book- Further Readings- Sentiments- Evaluation, Potency, and Activity (EPA)-Measuring EPA - Universality of EPA- Further Readings- Culture- Consensus- Individuality Versus Norms- Measurement Implications- Cultural Stability- Instability or Unreliability? - Variations Across Cultures- Further Readings - Sub-Cultures- Gender- A Pseudo-Sub-Culture- Gendered Traits- Gay Christians - Deviance Sub-Cultures- Non-Normalized Deviants - Occupations- Further Readings- Defining Situations- Identities- Institutions- Cues to Institutions- Selves- Multiple Identities- Identity Modifiers- Further Readings- Interpreting Actions- Action Frames- Institutional Coherence- Affective Processing - Impression Formation- Stability- Behavior Effects- Diminishment- Consistencies- Congruencies- Balance- States of Being - Cross-Cultural Variations- Versus Sentiments-Deflection- Identifying Behaviors - Further Readings - Building Actions-Selecting a Behavior- Social Interaction- Groups - Avoiding Diminishment - Social Roles - Medicine- Law - Work Roles - Macroactions - Informal Roles- Deviance- Interactions With Deviants- Interactions Among Deviants- Further Readings - Emotions - Emotions as Signals- Impressions and Emotions - Characteristic and Structural Emotions - Solidarity - Emotions and Motivation - Stress - Self-Sentiments and Stress - Emotions and Stress - Emotions of Deviants- Further Readings- Changing Sentiments- Re-identification - Identity Filtering- Labeling Deviants - Attribution - Inferences From Emotionality- Identity Fluctuation- Sentiment Change- New Sentiments - Enculturation- Turning Points- Further Readings- Selves- Salient Identities- Commitment and Alienation- Deviance Forays - Deviants - Self-Repugnance - Patterns of Deviance - Self-Fluctuation- Cultural Shifts in Self - Further Readings- Part II Mathematics of Affect Control Theory - Event Likelihood- Optimal Behavior- Incorporating Settings- Self-Directed Action - Optimal Identity- Re-identifying Actors- Re-identifying Object Persons - Modifiers - Emotions- Characteristic Emotion- Attributes- Emotions and Re-identification - Inferences From Mood- Elaborations- Self and Identities- Minimizing Inauthenticity- Illustrative Analyses- Optimal Behavior- Optimal Re-identifications- Emotions and Re-identification- Programming the Model- Organization of Analyses- Emotionality Constraints - Impression-Formation Equations- Selection - Algorithms- Part III Researching Affect Control Theory- Growth of Affect Control Theory- Chronology - Branches- Measurement of Affective Dimensions- Impression Formation- Theory and Mathematics- Self- Computer Programming- Experiments- Emotions- Sub-Cultures, Gender, Ideology- Life Course- Social Structure, Social Change- Politics - Deviance - Language and Arts- Business - Simulations- Conducting Simulations- Define Interactants Form- Define Situation Form- Define Events Form- Analyze Events Form- View Report Form - Other Capabilities - Errors- Different Versions of Interact - Further Readings - Basic Concepts in Affect Control Theory- References - Index
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References
Impressions from events
TL;DR: This paper found that all English speakers had similar potency and activity dynamics, while the Arabic study showed subtantial differences in the processing of these dimensions, and that there were similarities in evaluation dynamics appeared in all studies.
104
How bad was it? The effects of victim and perpetrator emotion on responses to criminal court vignettes
Olga Tsoudis,Lynn Smith-Lovin +1 more
TL;DR: The authors used affect control theory to predict how the emotions displayed by a perpetrator and a victim during their criminal trial statements influence a juror's judgments about their identities, and then asked how these identity judgments about the perpetrator and victim affect the recommended sentence for the perpetrator.
103
Self, Identity, and Interaction in an Ecology of Identities
Lynn Smith-Lovin
- 01 Jan 2003
TL;DR: Stryker as mentioned in this paper made the connection between social structure, meaning and action that drives structural symbolic interaction today, and he reasserted the ability of the basic symbolic interactionist principle to inform a powerful theoretical view of how social structure and individuals that exist within it effect and constitute one another.
Modified social identities: Amalgamations, attributions, and emotions
Christine Averett,David R. Heise +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, empirical development of equations for combining sentiments attached to a role identity and a modifier in order to yield an amalgamate sentiment for the particularized identity is reported. But these equations do not address the attribution process.
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