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Review
. 2004 Oct;67(1-2):51-76.
doi: 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2004.03.003.

Contributions from research on anger and cognitive dissonance to understanding the motivational functions of asymmetrical frontal brain activity

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Review

Contributions from research on anger and cognitive dissonance to understanding the motivational functions of asymmetrical frontal brain activity

Eddie Harmon-Jones. Biol Psychol. 2004 Oct.

Abstract

Research has suggested that approach-related positive emotions are associated with greater left frontal brain activity and that withdrawal-related negative emotions are associated with greater right frontal brain activity. Different explanations have been proposed. One posits that frontal asymmetry is due to emotional valence (positivity/negativity), one posits that frontal asymmetry is due to motivational direction (approach/withdrawal), and one posits that frontal asymmetry is due to a combination of emotional valence and motivational direction (positive-approach/negative-withdrawal). Because research had confounded emotional valence and motivational direction, the theoretical explanation was muddled. Solely supporting the motivational direction model, recent research has revealed that anger and cognitive dissonance, emotions with negative valence and approach motivational tendencies, are related to relatively greater left frontal activity.

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