Clinical neuroscience: towards a better understanding of non-conscious versus conscious processes involved in impulsive aggressive behaviours and pornography viewership
Assuming that the human mind indeed consists of a non-conscious and a onscious part it makes sense to believe that consciousness at times may struggle to get ccess to non-conscious content, which seems rather logical. At the same time most of us are aware that affective processing underlying our emotions happens non-consciously due to limbic activity that is mostly sub-cortical. Thus, any explicit response to a question about one's state of affect is inevitably prone to be inaccurate if not wrong. Therefore, any therapy, biological and/or psychological that is based on explicit responses is potentially misleading. With this opinion article we aim to generate awareness about potential discrepancies between self-reported versus objectively measured emotion-related states. There is more to emotion than just subjective feeling and we should start taking nonconscious emotion-related processes into account.