List of Human Emotions.
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Sources & fact-check policy

List of Human Emotions is an educational reference, so the psychology has to be right. This page explains where our information comes from, the frameworks we follow, and how we handle the limits of emotion science.

Where our information comes from

For each emotion we rely on mainstream, reputable sources — established emotion researchers, professional psychology bodies, and national health institutes — rather than pop-psychology blogs. Descriptions of triggers and expressions reflect typical patterns documented in that literature, not rules that hold for every person or every culture.

The frameworks we follow

We organise emotions around two widely taught models: psychologist Paul Ekman's six basic emotions (happiness, sadness, anger, fear, disgust, and surprise), which research suggests are broadly universal; and Robert Plutchik's model, in which more complex emotions form by combining basic ones (for example, love as joy plus trust). We note where scientists disagree — emotion categories are useful, not absolute.

What we changed from the original site

Not medical advice

This site describes emotions for general understanding. It does not diagnose or treat any condition. Emotion-related states such as anxiety and depression are described at an introductory level with links to health authorities; for personal concerns, consult a qualified professional.

Corrections welcome

Spotted an error? Tell us — include a source and we'll review and update. We date our reviews and re-check pages against current sources.

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