March 1st, 2007 | RESEARCH
Recent advances in neuroscience are highlighting connections between emotion, social functioning, and decision making that have the potential to revolutionize our understanding of the role of affect in education. In particular, the neurobiological evidence suggests that the aspects of cognition that we recruit most heavily in schools, namely learning, attention, memory, decision making, and social functioning, are both profoundly affected by and subsumed within the processes of emotion; we call these aspects emotional thought. Moreover, the evidence from brain-damaged patients suggests the hypothesis that emotion-related processes are required for skills and knowledge to be transferred from the structured school environment to real-world decision making because they provide an emotional rudder to guide judgment and action. Taken together, the evidence we present sketches an account of the neurobiological underpinnings of morality, creativity, and culture, all topics of critical importance to education. Our hope is that a better understanding of the neurobiological relationships between these constructs will provide a new basis for innovation in the design of learning environments.
Document
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Team Members
Mary Helen Immordino-Yang, Author, University of Southern CaliforniaAntonio Damasio, Co-Principal Investigator, University of Southern California
Citation
Identifier Type: ISSN
Identifier: 1751-2271
Identifier Type: DOI
Identifier: 10.1111/j.1751-228X.2007.00004.x
Publication: Mind, Brain, & Education
Volume: 1
Number: 1
Page(s): 3
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Tags
Audience: Educators | Teachers | Museum | ISE Professionals | Scientists
Discipline: Education and learning science | General STEM | Health and medicine | Life science
Resource Type: Peer-reviewed article | Research Products
Environment Type: Exhibitions | Informal | Formal Connections | Media and Technology | Public Programs