Emotion. What is Emotion? A conscious feeling of pleasantness/unpleasantness accompanied by...

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Emotion

Transcript of Emotion. What is Emotion? A conscious feeling of pleasantness/unpleasantness accompanied by...

Page 1: Emotion. What is Emotion?  A conscious feeling of pleasantness/unpleasantness accompanied by biological activation and expressive behavior  Includes.

Emotion

Page 2: Emotion. What is Emotion?  A conscious feeling of pleasantness/unpleasantness accompanied by biological activation and expressive behavior  Includes.

What is Emotion?

A conscious feeling of pleasantness/unpleasantness accompanied by biological activation and expressive behavior

Includes both biological and cognitive components Two Dimensions:

1. Arousal (intensity)The greater the arousal the more intense the emotion

2. Valence (positive/negative quality) Basic Inborn Emotions:

Joy, fear, anger, sadness, surprise and disgust (Ekman’s Research; Microexpressions)

Page 3: Emotion. What is Emotion?  A conscious feeling of pleasantness/unpleasantness accompanied by biological activation and expressive behavior  Includes.

Emotion is Multifaceted

Emotion refers to the mix of:

1. Physiological Arousal

2. Expressive Behaviors (how you react to the physiological arousal)

3. Conscious Experience (how you cognitively interpret environment)

Page 4: Emotion. What is Emotion?  A conscious feeling of pleasantness/unpleasantness accompanied by biological activation and expressive behavior  Includes.

Theories of Emotions

Evolutionary Theory James-Lange Theory Cannon-Bard Theory Opponent-Process Theory Schachter-Singer Two-Factor Theory Cognitive Appraisal Theory

Page 5: Emotion. What is Emotion?  A conscious feeling of pleasantness/unpleasantness accompanied by biological activation and expressive behavior  Includes.

Evolutionary Theory (Paul Ekman)

Emotions are developed because of adaptive values, allowing the organism to survive by avoiding dangerAnimals/humans showing expressions of anger allows us to

avoid conflict with them Knowing how we feel before we know what we think

Page 6: Emotion. What is Emotion?  A conscious feeling of pleasantness/unpleasantness accompanied by biological activation and expressive behavior  Includes.

Facial Expressions Are Universal No matter what part of the world you are from, facial expressions indicating 6 basic emotions tend to be universal.

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Facial Expressions Are Universal

The six universal emotions are:1. Happiness

2. Anger

Interest (not an emotion)

3. Disgust

4. Surprise

5. Sadness

6. Fear

Page 8: Emotion. What is Emotion?  A conscious feeling of pleasantness/unpleasantness accompanied by biological activation and expressive behavior  Includes.

Paul Ekman’s 6 Micorexpressions

Page 9: Emotion. What is Emotion?  A conscious feeling of pleasantness/unpleasantness accompanied by biological activation and expressive behavior  Includes.

Detecting Emotion/Lies With Facial Expressions

With experience and training it is possible to detect microexpressions which indicate guilt, despair, and fear.

Paul Ekman developed a system for classifying deception within emotional expression.

Must play close attention to facial muscles which are nearly impossible to control.

Page 11: Emotion. What is Emotion?  A conscious feeling of pleasantness/unpleasantness accompanied by biological activation and expressive behavior  Includes.

James-Lang Theory (William James & Karl Lange)

Proposed that our awareness of our physiological arousal leads to our conscious experience of emotion

Believe that we can change our feelings by changing our behavior Facial-feedback hypothesis: our facial expressions affect our emotional

experiences Smilingpositive moods Frowningnegative moods

External stimuli activate our automatic nervous systems, producing specific patterns of physiological changes for different emotions that create different emotional experiences See a mean dogwe run (SNS kicks in)then we realize we are afraid

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James-Lange Theory of Emotion

A Physiological Response causes the Emotion

Fear(emotion)

Poundingheart

(arousal)

Sight of oncoming

car(perception of

stimulus)

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Support for James-Lange

Subjects report feeling more sad when viewing scenes of war, sickness, and starvation if their “sad face” muscles are activated.

They also find comic strips funnier if their “happy face” muscles are activated.

This is called the facial feedback effect

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Criticism of James-LangeFear

(emotion)Pounding

heart(arousal)

Sight of oncoming

car(perception of

stimulus)

LOVE(emotion)

Poundingheart

(arousal)Sight of

Your secret crush

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Cannon-Bard Theory (Walter Cannon & Phillip Bard)

Disagreed with James-Lang Theory Conscious experience of emotion accompanies physiological responses

because the thalamus sends information to the limbic system & the cerebral cortex simultaneously interact

See a mean dogrun because we recognize we are afraid (happens at the same time)

*the thalamus does not directly cause emotional responses, it relays sensory info. to the amygdala and hypothalamus

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Cannon-BardTheory of Emotion

The Physiological Response and

the Emotion are experienced at the

SAME TIME

Sight of oncoming

car(perception of

stimulus)

Poundingheart

(arousal)

Fear(emotion)

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Cannon-Bard Theory of Emotion

Says James-Lange theory is full of crap.

The physiological change and the emotion occur simultaneously.

They believed it was the thalamus that helped this happen.

Page 18: Emotion. What is Emotion?  A conscious feeling of pleasantness/unpleasantness accompanied by biological activation and expressive behavior  Includes.

Think – Two cannons firing at the same time.

Physiological change (heart rate, breathing)

Emotion

Page 19: Emotion. What is Emotion?  A conscious feeling of pleasantness/unpleasantness accompanied by biological activation and expressive behavior  Includes.

Opponent-Process Theory (Solomon and Corbit)

When we experience an emotion, an opposing emotion will counter the first emotion, lessening the experience of that emotion

During repeated occasions, the opposing emotion becomes strongerWhen we go bungee jumping the first time, we feel extreme

fear and high levels of a “rush”…after multiple jumps, we become less fearful & don’t experience as strong of a “rush”

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Schachter-Singer Two-Factor Theory (Stanley Schachter & Jerome Singer)

We infer emotion from arousal and then label it according to our cognitive explanation of the arousal

If we feel aroused and someone is yelling at us, we must be angry

Page 21: Emotion. What is Emotion?  A conscious feeling of pleasantness/unpleasantness accompanied by biological activation and expressive behavior  Includes.

Schachter’s Two Factor Theory of Emotion

We experience the Physiological Response and give it a

Cognitive Label and this produces our emotions

Cognitivelabel

“I’m afraid”

Fear(emotion)

Sight of oncoming

car(perception of

stimulus)

Poundingheart

(arousal)

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Reviewing the three theories

Emotion follows (lags behind) arousal

Emotion occurs at the same time as arousal

Arousal + Cognitive label Emotion

James-Lange

Cannon-Bard

Schachter’s Two Factor

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Cognitive-Appraisal Theory (Richard Lazarus)

Our emotional experience depends on our interpretation of the situation we are in Primary appraisal: Assess potential consequences of the situation Secondary appraisal: We decide what to do

We can change our emotions if we learn to interpret the situation differently Counter Arguments:

Evolutionary Psychologists: Disagree that emotions depend on evaluation of the situation (emotional response is developed before complex thinking)

Robert Zajonc: thinks we often know how we feel before we know what we think about the situation

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If you are in a falling vehicle heading toward the ground at 60 mph, your autonomic reaction would include heart racing and screaming. But if your cognitive appraisal says you are on a rollercoaster, then you have the emotion of “fun.”

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Biology of Emotions

Sympathetic Nervous System (SNS): Hormonal secretion Amygdala: influences aggression and fear which interacts

with the hypothalamus Hypothalamus: sets emotional states such as rage Cerebral cortex & frontal lobe: interpretation of emotions Left hemisphere: Positive emotions Right hemisphere: Negative emotions Body language & vocal qualities change for different

emotions

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Biology of Fear

The body’s control center for learning/enacting fear is the amygdala.

Loss or damage to one’s amygdala has lead to fearlessness in some patients.

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Must Cognition Precede all Emotions?

Some pathways, especially ones involving amygdala (fear), bypass cortical areas involved in thinking.

Certain likes, dislikes, and fears do ignore conscious thinking.

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Two Routes to Emotion

Appraisal

Event

Emotionalresponse

Physiologicalactivation

Expressivebehavior

Subjectiveexperience

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The Physical Arousal of Emotion is Controlled by The Autonomic Nervous System

It is very difficult to differentiate the physical arousal associated with many emotions (criticism of James-Lange Theory) even though they definitely feel different.

The arousal associated with emotions are controlled by the autonomic nervous system’s divisions the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems.

Page 30: Emotion. What is Emotion?  A conscious feeling of pleasantness/unpleasantness accompanied by biological activation and expressive behavior  Includes.

Autonomic Nervous System’s Division Autonomic nervous system controls

physiological arousal

Sympatheticdivision (arousing)

Pupils dilate

Decreases

Perspires

Increases

Accelerates

Inhibits

Secrete stresshormones

Parasympatheticdivision (calming)

Pupils contract

Increases

Dries

Decreases

Slows

Activates

Decreasessecretion of

stress hormones

EYES

SALIVATION

SKIN

RESPIRATION

HEART

DIGESTION

ADRENALGLANDS