Michelle "Lani" Shiota is an associate professor of social psychology at Arizona State University. Her studies of positive emotions, emotion regulation, and emotional mechanisms of close relationships use multiple methods including cardiovascular, electrodermal, and EEG measures, behavioral coding, cognitive tasks, and narrative analysis as well as self-reports. Dr. Shiota's research has been funded by National Institutes of Health and the John Templeton Foundation, and published in high-impact journals including: Emotion, JPSP, Cognition and Emotion, Psychology and Aging, and American Psychologist. She is lead author of the textbook "Emotion" (Oxford), and co-editor of the "Handbook of Positive Emotions" (Guilford). She is currently on the Board of Directors for the Society for Psychophysiological Research (SPR), as well as an elected fellow of the Association for Psychological Science (APS), and member of the Society for Experimental Social Psychology (SESP). She received her bachelor's in communication from Stanford University, and her doctorate in social/personality psychology from University of California at Berkeley. Shiota joined the social psychology faculty at ASU in 2006, establishing the Shiota Psychophysiology Laboratory for Affective Testing (a.k.a. SPLAT Lab).
FOR MORE INFORMATION, CHECK OUT THE SHIOTA PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY LAB (SPLAT LAB) WEB PAGE
My lab investigates several basic questions regarding emotion, using a multi-method approach that integrates physiological, behavioral, cognitive, narrative, and questionnaire measures of emotional experience and its implications for social interaction. Core themes of this research are:
POSITIVE EMOTION DIFFERENTIATION. Emotion researchers have long distinguished among several functionally distinct negative emotions, such as sadness, fear, and anger, but empirical research on potentially "discrete" positive emotions is more recent. My lab takes an evolutionary approach to defining multiple positive emotion constructs, and studies the extent of overlap and differentiation among these states. We use the proposed adaptive functions of each emotion as a basis for predicting various aspects of emotional responding, including profiles of autonomic nervous system reactivity, facial expressions, and implications for social cognition and behavior.
AWE. A rich body of research suggests that positive emotions tend to increase our use of internal knowledge structures, such as stereotypes, heuristics, and schemas, in processing new information from the environment. Functional theories of awe, however, propose that this emotion has the opposite effect. Awe has been defined as the positive emotion one may experience when facing a stimulus that is vast or extraordinary, insufficiently accounted for by one's current knowledge. Awe should thus promote cognitive and behavioral changes that facilitate taking in new information from the environment, or cognitive "accommodation," rather than relying on what one already knows to interpret the situation (cognitive "assimilation"). Our current research on awe addresses implications of this emotion state for "executive" cognitive functioning and for behavior.
EMOTION REGULATION. One of the great features of human psychology is the capacity to regulate our emotions - to use our attention and our thoughts to alter our feelings, and to control the way we express feelings to others. We regulate emotions using a wide range of strategies, some of which are more conducive to health and well-being than others. My lab is particularly interested in the use of positive emotions to regulate emotional experience in stressful or upsetting situations. Specific strategies include positive reppraisal, or thinking about positive aspects of upsetting situations as well as the negative aspects, and creating positive events, or making time for islands of healthy enjoyment in the midst of an ongoing stressor. We are also interested in the ways that people help each other to regulate their emotions - the co-regulation of emotion.
EMOTIONAL PROCESSES IN CLOSE RELATIONSHIPS. Emotions are profoundly important for our interactions with other people. We form impressions of new people, build and maintain close relationships, and coordinate dyadic and group action all with the help of emotions. We investigate some of the mechanisms by which emotions support close relationships, including new friendships, long-standing friendships, and intimacy in romantic relationships and marriage.
We review applications for new volunteer research assistants each semester, and I will review graduate student applications for Fall 2018.
* Student/post-doc co-author
Spring 2019 | |
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Course Number | Course Title |
PSY 399 | Supervised Research |
PSY 499 | Individualized Instruction |
PSY 501 | Supervised Teaching |
Fall 2018 | |
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Course Number | Course Title |
PSY 394 | Special Topics |
PSY 399 | Supervised Research |
PSY 499 | Individualized Instruction |
PSY 550 | Advanced Social Psychology |
Spring 2018 | |
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Course Number | Course Title |
PSY 399 | Supervised Research |
PSY 499 | Individualized Instruction |
PSY 591 | Seminar |
Fall 2017 | |
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Course Number | Course Title |
PSY 399 | Supervised Research |
PSY 499 | Individualized Instruction |
PSY 591 | Seminar |
Spring 2017 | |
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Course Number | Course Title |
PSY 230 | Introduction to Statistics |
PSY 399 | Supervised Research |
PSY 499 | Individualized Instruction |
Fall 2016 | |
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Course Number | Course Title |
PSY 399 | Supervised Research |
PSY 499 | Individualized Instruction |
PSY 591 | Seminar |
Spring 2016 | |
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Course Number | Course Title |
PSY 399 | Supervised Research |
PSY 499 | Individualized Instruction |
PSY 501 | Supervised Teaching |
PSY 591 | Seminar |
Fall 2015 | |
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Course Number | Course Title |
PSY 399 | Supervised Research |
PSY 499 | Individualized Instruction |
PSY 550 | Advanced Social Psychology |
Spring 2015 | |
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Course Number | Course Title |
PSY 399 | Supervised Research |
PSY 499 | Individualized Instruction |
PSY 591 | Seminar |
PSY 600 | Research Methods |
Fall 2014 | |
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Course Number | Course Title |
PSY 394 | Special Topics |
PSY 399 | Supervised Research |
PSY 499 | Individualized Instruction |