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Affect and cognition, part 1: “cross-fire” interaction model

Gerhard Fink (Department of Global Business and Trage, Vienna University of Economics and Business, Vienna, Austria)
Maurice Yolles (Centre for the Creation of Coherent Change and Knowledge, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, UK)

Kybernetes

ISSN: 0368-492X

Article publication date: 15 December 2017

Issue publication date: 2 January 2018

210

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this study is to develop a generic cultural socio-cognitive trait theory of a “plural affect agency” (the emotional organisation). Interaction between the cognitive and the affective personality is modelled.

Design/methodology/approach

James Gross’ (1988) model of Emotion Regulation is integrated with Normative Personality Theory in the context of Mindset Agency Theory: The agency has a “cognitive system” and an emotion regulating “affective system” which interact (Fink and Yolles, 2015).

Findings

Processes of emotion regulation pass through three stages: “Identification”, “Elaboration” and “Execution”. In a social environment, emotions are expressed through actions. The results of actions (feedback, goal achievement) are assessed through affective operative intelligence in the light of pursued goals.

Research limitations/implications

The theory will provide guidance for analysis of cultural differentiation within social systems (e.g. societies or organisations), with reference to identification, elaboration and execution of “emotion knowledge”.

Practical implications

Understanding interdependencies between cognition and emotion regulation is a prerequisite of managerial intelligence and strategic cultural intelligence, in demand for interaction and integration processes across social systems.

Originality/Value

The model provides a framework which links emotion expression and emotion regulation with cognition analysis. In part 2 of this paper, based on this theory a typology can be developed which for given contexts allows ex ante expectations of typical patterns of behaviour to be identified.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Earlier versions of this paper were presented at the BSLab-SYDIC workshop, January 2017 in Rome, Italy and at the IACCM track at the SIETAR/IACCM conference at Dublin, May 2017. The authors thank anonymous reviewers, Ilan Alon, Chiara Cannavale, Renate Motschnig, Helmut Nechansky, Arnold Schuh, Günter Stahl, Steven Wallis, BSLab and IACCM conference participants for good questions and helpful advice.

Citation

Fink, G. and Yolles, M. (2018), "Affect and cognition, part 1: “cross-fire” interaction model", Kybernetes, Vol. 47 No. 1, pp. 80-98. https://doi.org/10.1108/K-07-2017-0262

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited

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