TY - BOOK AU - Nadel, Jacqueline TI - Emotional development SN - 9780198528845 U1 - 152.4 PY - 2005/// CY - New York PB - Oxford N1 - 1 The search for the fundamental brain/mind sources of affective experience Jaak Panksepp and Marcia Smith Pasqualini 2 Emotions in chimpanzee infants: the value of a comparative developmental approach to understand the evolutionary bases of emotion Kim A. Bard 3 Action and emotion in development of cultural intelligence: why infants have feelings like ours Colwyn Trevarthen 4 Maternal-fetal psychobiology: a very early look at emotional development Amy Salisbury, Penelope Yanni, Linda Lagasse, and Barry Lester 5 Emotional processes in human newborns: a functionalist perspective Robert Soussignan and Benoist Schaal 6 Emotions in early mimesis Giannis Kugiumutzakis, Theano Kokkinaki, Maria Makrodimitraki, and Elena Vitalaki 7 Feeling shy and showing-off: self-conscious emotions must regulate self-awareness Vasudevi Reddy 8 Infant perception and production of emotions during face-to-face interactions with live and 'virtual' adults Darwin Muir, Kang Lee, Christine Mains, and Sylvia Mains 9 Emotion understanding: robots as tools and models Lola Canamero and Philippe Gaussier 10 The repertoire of infant facial expressions: an ontogenetic perspective Harriet Oster 11 Why is connection with others so critical? The formation of dyadic states of consciousness and the expansion of individuals' states of consciousness: coherence governed selection and the co-creation of meaning out of messy meaning making Edward Tronick 12 Prenatal depression effects on the fetus and neonate Tiffany Field 13 Emotion sharing and emotion knowledge: typical and impaired development Helene Tremblay, Philippe Brun, and Jacqueline Nadel 14 Social-emotional impairment and self-regulation in autism spectrum disorders Katherine A. Loveland 15 Emotional regulation and affective disorders in children and adolescents with obsessive compulsive disorder Martine Flament and David Cohen 16 Loss of emotional fluency as a developmental phenotype: the example of anhedonia Stephanie Dubai and Roland Jouvent ER -