Frontiers in Psychology (May 2015)

The Role of the Positive and Negative Emotional Attractors in Vision and Shared Vision: Toward Effective Leadership, Relationships and Engagement

  • Richard Eleftherios Boyatzis,
  • Kylie eRochford,
  • Scott eTaylor

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00670
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6

Abstract

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Personal and shared vision have a long history in management and organizational practices yet only recently have we begun to build a systematic body of empirical knowledge about the role of personal and shared vision in organizations. As the introductory paper for this special topic in Frontiers in Psychology, we present a theoretical argument as to the existence and critical role of two states in which a person, dyad, team, or organization may find themselves when engaging in the creation of a personal or shared vision: the positive emotional attractor (PEA) and the negative emotional attractor (NEA). These two primary states are strange attractors, each characterized by three dimensions: (1) positive versus negative emotional arousal; (2) endocrine arousal of the parasympathetic nervous system versus sympathetic nervous system; and (3) neurological activation of the default mode network versus the task positive network. We argue that arousing the PEA is critical when creating or affirming a personal vision (i.e., sense of one’s purpose and ideal self). We begin our paper by reviewing the underpinnings of our PEA-NEA theory, briefly review each of the papers in this special issue, and conclude by discussing the practical implications of the theory.

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