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Chapter 9 Motivation and Emotion

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Title: Chapter 9 Motivation and Emotion


1
Chapter 9Motivation and Emotion
2
Motivation
  • Dynamics of behavior that initiate, sustain, and
    direct or terminate actions

3
A Model of Motivational Activities
  • Model of how motivated activities work
  • Need Internal deficiency causes
  • Drive Energized motivational state (e.g.,
    hunger, thirst) activates a
  • Response Action or series of actions designed to
    attain a
  • Goal Target of motivated behavior
  • Incentive Value Goals appeal beyond its ability
    to fill a need

4
Types of Motives
  • Primary Motive Innate (inborn) motives based on
    biological needs we must meet to survive
  • Stimulus Motive Innate needs for stimulation and
    information
  • Secondary Motive Based on learned needs, drives,
    and goals

5
Hunger Big Mac Attack?
  • Homeostasis Body equilibrium balance
  • Influences on hunger
  • Obesity
  • Internal
  • Glucagon-like Peptide 1 (GLP-1) Substance in
    brain that terminates eating
  • Hypothalamus Brain structure regulates many
    aspects of motivation and emotion, including
    hunger, thirst, and sexual behavior
  • External
  • External stimuli that tend to encourage hunger or
    elicit eating these cues may cause you to eat
    even if you are stuffed

6
Behavioral Dieting
  • Weight reduction based on changing exercise and
    eating habits and not on temporary
    self-starvation
  • Some keys
  • Start with a complete physical
  • Exercise
  • Be committed to weight loss

7
Behavioral Dieting (cont'd)
  • Observe yourself, keep an eating diary, and keep
    a chart of daily progress.
  • Eat based on hunger, not on taste or learned
    habits that tell you to always clean your plate.
  • Avoid snacks.
  • Reward yourself if you change eating habits and
    punish yourself if you do not.

8
Eating Disorders Anorexia Nervosa
  • Active self-starvation or sustained loss of
    appetite that seems to have psychological origins
  • Control issues seem to be involved
  • Very difficult to effectively treat
  • Affects adolescent females overwhelmingly

9
Eating Disorders Bulimia Nervosa (Binge-Purge
Syndrome)
  • Excessive eating usually followed by self-induced
    vomiting and/or taking laxatives
  • Difficult to treat
  • Prozac approved by FDA to treat bulimia nervosa
  • Affects females overwhelmingly

10
Causes of Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia Nervosa
  • Anorectics and bulimics have exaggerated fears of
    becoming fat they think they are fat when the
    opposite is true!
  • Bulimics are obsessed with food and weight
    anorectics with perfect control.
  • Anorectics will often be put on a weight-gain
    diet to restore weight.

11
Thirst and Pain
  • Extracellular Thirst When water is lost from
    fluids surrounding the cells of the body
  • Intracellular Thirst When fluid is drawn out of
    cells because of increased concentration of salts
    and minerals outside the cell
  • Best satisfied by drinking water
  • Pain Avoidance An episodic drive
  • Distinct episodes when bodily damage takes place
    or is about to occur

12
Stimulus Drives - Arousal
  • Reflect needs for information, exploration,
    manipulation, and sensory input
  • Sensation Seeking/ Inverted U Trait of people
    who prefer high levels of stimulation (e.g., the
    contestants on Eco-Challenge and Fear Factor)
  • Yerkes-Dodson Law If a task is simple, it is
    best for arousal to be high if it is complex,
    lower levels of arousal provide for the best
    performance

13
Learned Motives
  • Social Motives Acquired by growing up in a
    particular society or culture
  • Need for Achievement (nAch) Desire to meet some
    internal standard of excellence
  • Need for Power Desire to have impact or control
    over others

14
Abraham Maslow and Needs
  • Hierarchy of Human Needs Maslows ordering of
    needs based on presumed strength or potency some
    needs are more powerful than others and thus will
    influence your behavior to a greater degree
  • Basic Needs First four levels of needs in
    Maslows hierarchy
  • Lower needs tend to be more potent than higher
    needs
  • Growth Needs Higher-level needs associated with
    self-actualization
  • Meta-Needs Needs associated with impulses for
    self-actualization

15
Types of Motivation
  • Intrinsic Motivation Motivation coming from
    within, not from external rewards based on
    personal enjoyment of a task
  • Extrinsic Motivation Based on obvious external
    rewards, obligations, or similar factors (e.g.,
    pay, grades)

16
Emotions
  • State characterized by physiological arousal and
    changes in facial expressions, gestures, posture,
    and subjective feelings
  • Physiological Changes Include heart rate, blood
    pressure, perspiration, and other involuntary
    bodily responses
  • Emotional Expression Outward signs of what a
    person is feeling
  • Emotional Feelings Private emotional experience

17
Plutchiks First Four Primary Emotions
  • Most basic emotions are
  • Fear
  • Surprise
  • Sadness
  • Disgust

18
Plutchiks Last Four Primary Emotions (cont'd)
  • Anger
  • Anticipation
  • Joy
  • Acceptance

19
Brain and Emotion
  • Autonomic Nervous System (ANS) Neural system
    that connects brain with internal organs and
    glands
  • Sympathetic Branch Part of ANS that activates
    body for emergency action
  • Parasympathetic Branch Part of ANS that quiets
    body and conserves energy
  • Parasympathetic Rebound Overreaction to intense
    emotion

20
Lie Detectors
  • Polygraph Device that records heart rate, blood
    pressure, respiration, and galvanic skin response
    (GSR) lie detector
  • GSR Measures sweating
  • Irrelevant Questions Neutral, emotional
    questions in a polygraph test
  • Relevant Questions Questions to which only
    someone guilty should react by becoming anxious
    or emotional
  • Control Questions Questions that almost always
    provoke anxiety in a polygraph (e.g. Have you
    ever taken any office supplies?)

21
Body Language (Kinesics)
  • Study of communication through body movement,
    posture, gestures, and facial expressions
  • Facial Blends Mix of two or more basic
    expressions

22
Three Types of Facial Expressions
  • Pleasantness-Unpleasantness Degree to which a
    person is experiencing pleasure or displeasure
  • Attention-Rejection Degree of attention given to
    a person or object
  • Activation Degree of arousal a person is
    experiencing

23
Theories of Emotion
  • James-Lange Theory Emotional feelings follow
    bodily arousal and come from awareness of such
    arousal.
  • Cannon-Bard Theory The thalamus (in brain)
    causes emotional feelings and bodily arousal to
    occur at the same time.
  • Schachters Cognitive Theory Emotions occur when
    a label is applied to general physical arousal.
  • Attribution Mental process of assigning causes
    to events attributing arousal to a certain
    source.
  • Facial Feedback Hypothesis Sensations from
    facial expressions and help define what emotion
    someone feels.

24
A Modern View of Emotion
  • Emotional Appraisal Evaluating personal meaning
    of a stimulus
  • Emotional Intelligence Combination of skills,
    including empathy, self-control, self-awareness,
    sensitivity to feelings of others, persistence,
    and self-motivation
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