Revisiting Panksepp: a review of his contributions to neuropsychoanalysis
S. E. Ilgin, S. Hiçdönmez, H. Atalay

TL;DR
This paper reviews Jaak Panksepp's theories on emotions, feelings, and affect, and their evolutionary roles in neuropsychoanalysis.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive overview of Panksepp's contributions to understanding basic affective systems in mammals.
Findings
Panksepp distinguished emotions, feelings, and affect, emphasizing their evolutionary functions.
Three primary emotions—joy, fear, and disgust—are linked to specific neurochemicals like dopamine and serotonin.
Basic emotions evolved to address fundamental life tasks and are foundational for future neuropsychoanalytic research.
Abstract
Panksepp paved the way for neuropsychoanalysts to better delineate the differences between emotions, feelings, and affect, and their evolutionary purposes. Affect pertains to an individual’s capacity to engage in emotional responses to stimuli, events, memories, and thoughts, while feelings denote the conscious perceptions of emotions, which are primarily social in nature. Feelings are personal and biographical, while affect remains largely impersonal. Panksepp’s theory of basic affective systems in mammals, dividing emotions into positive and negative categories, is another major contribution to neuropsychoanalysis. Three primary emotions -joy, fear, and disgust- have been identified in humans, which are associated with specific peptides and monoamines (e.g., dopamine and endorphins for joy, norepinephrine and CRH for fear, serotonin and substance P for disgust). These basic emotions…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsPsychotherapy Techniques and Applications · Scientific Research and Philosophical Inquiry · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
