THE JAMES-LANGE THEORY: DO GUT
REACTIONS EQUAL EMOTIONS?
To William James and Carl Lange, who were among the fi rst researchers to explore
the nature of emotions, emotional experience is, very simply, a reaction to instinctive
bodily events that occur as a response to some situation or event in the environment.
This view is summarized in James’s statement, “We feel sorry because we cry, angry
because we strike, afraid because we tremble” (James, 1890).
James and Lange took the view that the instinctive response of crying at a loss
leads us to feel sorrow, that striking out at someone who frustrates us results in our
feeling anger, that trembling at a menacing threat causes us to feel fear. They sug-
gested that for every major emotion there is an accompanying physiological or “gut”
reaction of internal organs—called a visceral experience . It is this specifi c pattern of
visceral response that leads us to label the emotional experience.
In sum, James and Lange proposed that we experience emotions as a result of
physiological changes that produce specifi c sensations. The brain interprets these
sensations as specifi c kinds of emotional experiences (see the fi rst part of Figure 2).
This view has come to be called the James-Lange theory of emotion (Laird & Bresler,
1990; Cobos et al., 2002).
The James-Lange theory has some serious drawbacks, however. For the theory
to be valid, visceral changes would have to occur relatively quickly because we
experience some emotions—such as fear upon hearing a stranger rapidly approaching
on a dark night—almost instantaneously. Yet emotional experiences frequently occur
even before there is time for certain physiological changes to be set into motion.
Because of the slowness with which some visceral changes take place, it is hard to
see how they could be the source of immediate emotional experience.
The James-Lange theory poses another diffi culty: Physiological arousal does not
invariably produce emotional experience. For example, a person who is jogging has
an increased heartbeat and respiration rate as well as many of the other physiological
changes associated with certain emotions. Yet joggers typically do not think of such
changes in terms of emotion. There cannot be a one-to-one correspondence, then,
between visceral changes and emotional experience. Visceral changes by themselves
may not be suffi cient to produce emotion.
Finally, our internal organs produce a relatively limited range of sensations.
Although some types of physiological changes are associated with specifi c emo-
tional experiences, it is diffi cult to imagine how each of the myriad emotions that
people are capable of experiencing could be the result of a unique visceral change.
Many emotions actually are associated with relatively similar sorts of visceral
changes, a fact that contradicts the James-Lange theory (Davidson et al., 1994;
Cameron, 2002).
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