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Abstract Evidence offered by Frijda and by Conway and Bekerian tells us less directly than might be thought about how people mentally represent emotion–and even less directly about emotion itself. For example, people seem to distinguish between types of emotion largely on the basis of situational antecedents, but the precise form and content of the mental representation of situational antecedents and their link to emotion remains unclear.
James A. Russell (Wed,) studied this question.
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