The rise of affectivism.
Dukes D., Abrams K., Adolphs R., Ahmed ME., Beatty A., Berridge KC., Broomhall S., Brosch T., Campos JJ., Clay Z., Clément F., Cunningham WA., Damasio A., Damasio H., D'Arms J., Davidson JW., de Gelder B., Deonna J., de Sousa R., Ekman P., Ellsworth PC., Fehr E., Fischer A., Foolen A., Frevert U., Grandjean D., Gratch J., Greenberg L., Greenspan P., Gross JJ., Halperin E., Kappas A., Keltner D., Knutson B., Konstan D., Kret ME., LeDoux JE., Lerner JS., Levenson RW., Loewenstein G., Manstead ASR., Maroney TA., Moors A., Niedenthal P., Parkinson B., Pavlidis I., Pelachaud C., Pollak SD., Pourtois G., Roettger-Roessler B., Russell JA., Sauter D., Scarantino A., Scherer KR., Stearns P., Stets JE., Tappolet C., Teroni F., Tsai J., Turner J., Reekum CV., Vuilleumier P., Wharton T., Sander D.
Research over the past decades has demonstrated the explanatory power of emotions, feelings, motivations, moods, and other affective processes when trying to understand and predict how we think and behave. In this consensus article, we ask: has the increasingly recognized impact of affective phenomena ushered in a new era, the era of affectivism?