How Emotions Work | Insights from Neuroscientist Lisa Feldman Barrett

Emotions are like colors you mix on a palette, your brain makes them from basic ingredients.

Imagine your brain is like a kitchen, and emotions are the recipes you cook. Lisa Feldman Barrett, a neuroscientist, says we all have the same basic ingredients, like salt, pepper, and sugar, but we mix them in different ways to make our own special flavors of feelings.

How Your Brain Makes Emotions

Your brain has something called the emotional brain, it’s like the chef in the kitchen. It uses signals from your body and your experiences to create emotions. If you're running late for school, your heart might race, and that feeling is a mix of fear and stress.

The Power of Words and Ideas

Words and ideas are like spices in the kitchen. When you hear "I'm happy" or think about "my favorite toy," it adds flavor to your emotions. So even if two kids have the same basic ingredients, they might feel different things, one feels excited, the other feels calm.

Just like how a recipe can change with more sugar or less salt, our feelings are made by what we experience and what we think about them. That’s why understanding emotions is like learning new recipes, it helps you know yourself better! Emotions are like colors you mix on a palette, your brain makes them from basic ingredients.

Imagine your brain is like a kitchen, and emotions are the recipes you cook. Lisa Feldman Barrett, a neuroscientist, says we all have the same basic ingredients, like salt, pepper, and sugar, but we mix them in different ways to make our own special flavors of feelings.

How Your Brain Makes Emotions

Your brain has something called the emotional brain, it’s like the chef in the kitchen. It uses signals from your body and your experiences to create emotions. If you're running late for school, your heart might race, and that feeling is a mix of fear and stress.

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Examples

  1. A child feels happy when playing with their favorite toy because their brain creates this emotion from sensory input and past experiences.
  2. You feel scared in the dark because your brain combines previous memories of being startled with current sounds around you.
  3. When you laugh at a joke, it’s your brain organizing signals from your senses and memory into something fun.

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