Using Movement to Regulate Emotion: Neurophysiological Findings and Their Application in Psychotherapy

Emotion regulation is a person’s active attempt to manage their emotional state by enhancing or decreasing specific feelings. Peripheral theories of emotion argue that the origins of emotions stem from bodily responses. This notion has been reformulated in neurophysiological terms by Damasio, who cl...

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Main Author: Tal Shafir
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-09-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01451/full
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spelling doaj-ff0611ff46044299a5133e8852b128af2020-11-24T22:57:46ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782016-09-01710.3389/fpsyg.2016.01451198538Using Movement to Regulate Emotion: Neurophysiological Findings and Their Application in PsychotherapyTal Shafir0Tal Shafir1University of HaifaUniversity of MichiganEmotion regulation is a person’s active attempt to manage their emotional state by enhancing or decreasing specific feelings. Peripheral theories of emotion argue that the origins of emotions stem from bodily responses. This notion has been reformulated in neurophysiological terms by Damasio, who claimed that emotions are generated by conveying the current state of the body to the brain through interoceptive and proprioceptive afferent input. The resulting brain activation patterns represent unconscious emotions and correlate with conscious feelings. This proposition implies that through deliberate control of motor behavior and its consequent proprioception and interoception, one could regulate his emotions and affect his feelings. This concept is used in dance/movement (psycho)therapy where, by guiding to move in a certain way, the therapist helps the client to evoke, process, and regulate specific emotions. Exploration and practice of new and unfamiliar motor patterns can help the client to experience new unaccustomed feelings. The idea that certain motor qualities enhance specific emotions is utilized by the therapist also when she mirrors the client’s movements or motor qualities in order to feel what the client feels, and empathize with them. Because of the mirror neurons, feeling what the client feels is enabled also through observation and imagination of their movements and posture. This principle can be used by verbal therapists as well, who should be aware of its bi-directionality: clients seeing the therapist’s motor behavior are unconsciously affected by the therapist’s bodily expressions. Additional implications for psychotherapy, of findings regarding mirror neurons activation, are discussed.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01451/fullEmpathyMovementNeurosciencesPsychotherapyemotionEmotion Regulation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tal Shafir
Tal Shafir
spellingShingle Tal Shafir
Tal Shafir
Using Movement to Regulate Emotion: Neurophysiological Findings and Their Application in Psychotherapy
Frontiers in Psychology
Empathy
Movement
Neurosciences
Psychotherapy
emotion
Emotion Regulation
author_facet Tal Shafir
Tal Shafir
author_sort Tal Shafir
title Using Movement to Regulate Emotion: Neurophysiological Findings and Their Application in Psychotherapy
title_short Using Movement to Regulate Emotion: Neurophysiological Findings and Their Application in Psychotherapy
title_full Using Movement to Regulate Emotion: Neurophysiological Findings and Their Application in Psychotherapy
title_fullStr Using Movement to Regulate Emotion: Neurophysiological Findings and Their Application in Psychotherapy
title_full_unstemmed Using Movement to Regulate Emotion: Neurophysiological Findings and Their Application in Psychotherapy
title_sort using movement to regulate emotion: neurophysiological findings and their application in psychotherapy
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2016-09-01
description Emotion regulation is a person’s active attempt to manage their emotional state by enhancing or decreasing specific feelings. Peripheral theories of emotion argue that the origins of emotions stem from bodily responses. This notion has been reformulated in neurophysiological terms by Damasio, who claimed that emotions are generated by conveying the current state of the body to the brain through interoceptive and proprioceptive afferent input. The resulting brain activation patterns represent unconscious emotions and correlate with conscious feelings. This proposition implies that through deliberate control of motor behavior and its consequent proprioception and interoception, one could regulate his emotions and affect his feelings. This concept is used in dance/movement (psycho)therapy where, by guiding to move in a certain way, the therapist helps the client to evoke, process, and regulate specific emotions. Exploration and practice of new and unfamiliar motor patterns can help the client to experience new unaccustomed feelings. The idea that certain motor qualities enhance specific emotions is utilized by the therapist also when she mirrors the client’s movements or motor qualities in order to feel what the client feels, and empathize with them. Because of the mirror neurons, feeling what the client feels is enabled also through observation and imagination of their movements and posture. This principle can be used by verbal therapists as well, who should be aware of its bi-directionality: clients seeing the therapist’s motor behavior are unconsciously affected by the therapist’s bodily expressions. Additional implications for psychotherapy, of findings regarding mirror neurons activation, are discussed.
topic Empathy
Movement
Neurosciences
Psychotherapy
emotion
Emotion Regulation
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01451/full
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