The Affect Lab: The History and Limits of Measuring Emotion
Examines how our understanding of emotion is shaped by the devices we use to measure it Since the late nineteenth century, psychologists have used technological forms of media to measure and analyze emotion. In The Affect Lab , Grant Bollmer examines the use of measurement tools such as electrical s...
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Zusammenfassung: | Examines how our understanding of emotion is shaped by
the devices we use to measure it
Since the late nineteenth century, psychologists have used
technological forms of media to measure and analyze emotion. In
The Affect Lab , Grant Bollmer examines the use of
measurement tools such as electrical shocks, photography, video,
and the electroencephalograph to argue that research on emotions
has confused the physiology of emotion with the tools that define
its inscription.
Bollmer shows that the psychological definitions of emotion have
long been directly shaped by the physical qualities of the devices
used in laboratory research. To investigate these devices, The
Affect Lab examines four technologies related to the history
of psychology in North America: spiritualist toys at Harvard
University, serial photography in early American psychological
laboratories, experiments on "psychopaths" performed with an
instrument called an Offner Dynograph, and the development of the
"electropsychometer," or "E-Meter," by Volney Mathison and L. Ron
Hubbard.
Challenging the large body of humanities research surrounding
affect theory, The Affect Lab identifies an understudied
problem in formulations of affect: how affect is a construction
inseparable from the techniques and devices used to identify and
measure it. Ultimately, Bollmer offers a new critique of affect and
affect theory, demonstrating how deferrals to psychology and
neuroscience in contemporary theory and philosophy neglect the
material of experimental, scientific research.
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