Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Lisa Feldman Barrett (Toronto, 1963) es una profesora de psicología en la Northeastern University, [1] donde centra sus estudios en neurociencia afectiva. [2] Es la directora del Interdisciplinary Affective Science Laboratory.

  2. Lisa Feldman Barrett is a University Distinguished Professor of psychology at Northeastern University, where she focuses on affective science. She is a director of the Interdisciplinary Affective Science Laboratory. Along with James Russell, she is the founding editor-in-chief of the journal Emotion Review.

  3. Learn about the brain and emotions from Lisa Feldman Barrett, a leading expert in the field of emotion science. Explore her books, awards, and media appearances on her official website.

  4. Lisa Feldman Barrett. University Distinguished Professor of Psychology, Northeastern University. Verified email at affective-science.org ... MM Tugade, BL Fredrickson, L Feldman Barrett. Journal of personality 72 (6), 1161-1190, 2004. 2630: 2004: Are emotions natural kinds? LF Barrett. Perspectives on psychological science 1 (1), 28-58, 2006. 2501:

  5. La teoría de la emoción construida de Lisa Feldman Barrett, tal como se presenta en “Cómo se crean las emociones”, no sólo ha revolucionado nuestra comprensión de las emociones, sino que también ha provocado animados debates y críticas dentro y fuera de la comunidad científica.

  6. Dr. Lisa Feldman Barrett is a leading scientist in psychology and neuroscience, with over 275 publications and a National Institutes of Health Director’s Pioneer Award. She is a professor at Northeastern University, a chief science officer at Massachusetts General Hospital, and a popular author and speaker.

  7. ai.northeastern.edu › our-people › lisa-feldman-barrettLisa Barrett | EAI

    Lisa Feldman Barrett is a university distinguished professor at Northeastern University with appointments at the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH). Her lab is developing a systems-level model of brain and body mechanisms to unify human affect, emotion, motivation, cognition and action.