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TWO ROUTES TO EMOTION: SOME IMPLICATIONS OF MULTI-LEVEL THEORIES OF EMOTION FOR THERAPEUTIC PRACTICE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 March 1999

Michael J. Power
Affiliation:
University of Edinburgh, U.K.
Tim Dalgleish
Affiliation:
MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, Cambridge, U.K.

Abstract

Traditional models of the relationship between cognition and emotion have typically presented the relationship between cognition and emotion as a single level of sequential processes. However, a number of more recent models have argued to the contrary that the relationship is complex and has to be modelled by multi-level processing systems. One such model, the SPAARS approach (Power & Dalgleish, 1997), is summarized, in particular, in relation to clinical theory and practice in the cognitive behaviour therapies. For example, the proposal in SPAARS that there are two parallel routes to the production of emotion has a number of interesting clinical consequences. Highlights are presented of what some of these consequences might be, and a number of recommendations are made for clinical practice.

Type
Main Section
Copyright
© 1999 British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies

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