Warm UP
description
Transcript of Warm UP
Warm UP Identify the following topics in your
own words–Alfred Kinsey–Sexual Response Cycle–Extrinsic Motivation– Industrial Psychology–Theory x– Impotence
Chapter 13 Emotion pt. 1: Facial Expressions and Theories of
Emotions
Emotion is Multifaceted Emotion refers to the
mix of:1. Physiological Arousal2. Expressive Behaviors (how you react to the physiological arousal)3. Conscious Experience (how you cognitively interpret environment)
Facial Expressions Are Universal
No matter what part of the world you are from, facial expressions indicating 6 basic emotions tend to be universal.
Facial Expressions Are Universal
The six universal emotions are:1. Happiness2. Anger3. Surprise4. Sadness5. Fear6. Disgust
Context Affects Interpretation of Facial
ExpressionsBecause of the context, many interpret the bottom monster as fearful while seeing the top monster as angry even though they have the same facial expression.
Cultural Differences In Emotion Expression
Although the facial language is universal worldwide, cultures differ in how much emotion they express.
Western cultures like North America often have intense, prolonged emotional displays while some Eastern cultures like Japan often hide their emotions, especially when the emotion is negative.
Why?
Effects of Facial ExpressionsDo we smile because
we are happy, or are we happy because we smile?
There is an interplay between the emotion and our expression of it. The muscle contractions associated with emotions tend to amplify that emotion.Facial Expression Exercise
Theories of EmotionThe theories of emotion deal with the
interplay between your experience of the emotion and your body’s physiological response, looks to answer questions like:
Does your heart pound because you are afraid...or are you afraid because you feel your heart pounding?
James-Lange Theory of Emotion
The James-Lange theory would argue you feel fear because your heart is pounding.
The James-Lange theory argues that our experience of emotion is our awareness of our physiological responses to emotion-arousing stimuli.
James-Lange Theory of Emotion
?Fear
(emotion)Pounding
heart(arousal)
Sight of oncoming
car(perception of
stimulus)
Cannon-Bard Theory Of Emotion
Cannon and Bard would NOT argue that feeling of fear causes your heart to pound NOR that your heart pounding causes the feeling of fear; they believe each occur simultaneously.
Cannon-Bard Theory: theory that an emotion arousing stimulus simultaneously triggers physiological responses AND the subjective experience of emotion.
Cannon-Bard Theory of Emotion
Sight of oncoming
car(perception of
stimulus)
Poundingheart
(arousal)
Fear(emotion)
Applying the TheoriesAssuming someone had an injury in
which they were unable to feel any bodily sensations, how would this affect emotional responses according to the two theories?
Schacter’s Two Factor Theory of Emotion Brings
Cognition In Schacter criticized the Cannon-Bard
theory by arguing that we don’t automatically know when we are happy, angry, jealous, etc. We use situational cues to label our physical arousal.
Schacter Two Factor Theory: argues that to experience an emotion one must be physically aroused AND we must cognitively label the arousal.
CONTEXT MATTERS!!
Schacter’s Two Factor Theory
Cognitivelabel
“I’m afraid”
Fear(emotion)
Sight of oncoming
car(perception of
stimulus)
Poundingheart
(arousal)
Must Cognition Precede all Emotions?
Because some pathways, especially ones involving amygdala (fear), bypass cortical areas involved in thinking.
But certain likes, dislikes, and fears do ignore conscious thinking.
Two Routes to Emotion
Appraisal
Event
Emotionalresponse
Physiologicalactivation
Expressivebehavior
Subjectiveexperience
Two Dimensions of Emotion Are Valence and Arousal
1. Valence refers to the level of pleasantness of the emotion.
2. Arousal refers to how much the emotion physically activates the body.
Different levels of valence and arousal lead to different levels of emotion.
Cognitive interpretations also effect how these dimensions work.
Two Dimensions of EmotionPositivevalence
Negativevalence
Higharousal
Lowarousal
pleasantrelaxation joy
sadnessfear
anger
Quick WriteChristine is holding her 8 month-old
baby when a fierce dog appears out of nowhere and, with teeth bared, leaps for the baby’s face. Christine immediately ducks for cover to protect the baby, screams at the dog, then notices that her heart is banging and that she’s broken out in a cold sweat.
How would the James-Lange, Cannon-Bard, and Two-Factor Theories explain Christine’s reaction?