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General Psychology Chapters 11: Motivation and Emotion

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Title: General Psychology Chapters 11: Motivation and Emotion


1
General Psychology Chapters 11Motivation and
Emotion
2
  • Intrinsic motivation
  • The desire to perform an act because it is
    satisfying or pleasurable in and of itself
  • Extrinsic motivation
  • The desire to perform an act to gain a reward or
    to avoid an undesirable consequence

3
  • Activities that are intrinsically motivated
    generally are more likely to become a permanent
    part of our behavioral repertoire than those for
    which we received incentives or extrinsic rewards

4
  • Maslows hierarchy of needs
  • Abraham Maslow
  • Proposed that our need for self-fulfillment
    depends on how well our needs for physical
    well-being, safety, belonging, and esteem have
    been met

5
  • Variations in body weight
  • Heredity
  • Across all weight classes, from very thin to very
    obese, children adopted from birth tend to
    resemble their biological parents more than their
    adoptive parents in body size
  • More than 40 genes appear to be related to
    obesity and body weight regulation
  • Hormones
  • leptin affects the feeding and satiety centers
    and is known to be a key element in the
    regulation of body weight

6
  • Metabolic rate
  • The rate at which the body burns calories to
    produce energy
  • Physical activity uses up only about one-third of
    your energy intake the other two-thirds is
    consumed by the maintenance processes that keep
    you alive
  • When there is an imbalance between energy intake
    and output, your weight changes

7
  • Fat-cell theory
  • Fat-cell theory proposes that obesity is related
    to the number of fat cells in the body
  • number from 25 to 35 billion in normal-weight
    individuals

8
  • Set-point theory
  • Set-point theory suggests that humans are
    genetically programmed to carry a certain amount
    of body weight
  • According to set-point theory, an internal
    homeostatic system functions to maintain
    set-point weight
  • Increasing the amount of physical activity is the
    one method recommended for lowering the set point
    so that the body will store less fat

9
  • Dieting
  • The complexities of the processes involved in
    appetite regulation and energy metabolism explain
    why diets often do not work

10
  • Eating disorders
  • Anorexia nervosa
  • An eating disorder characterized by an
    overwhelming, irrational fear of being fat,
    compulsive dieting to the point of
    self-starvation, and excessive weight loss
  • Anorexia typically begins in adolescence, and
    most of those afflicted are females
  • Anorexics perception of their body size is
    grossly distorted
  • No matter how emaciated they become, they
    continue to perceive themselves as fat

11
  • Among young female anorexics, weight loss
    eventually results in amenorrhea (loss of
    menstrual cycle)
  • Anorexics may also develop low blood pressure,
    impaired heart function, dehydration, electrolyte
    disturbances, and sterility, as well as decreases
    in the gray matter volume in the brain, which are
    thought to be irreversible
  • Psychological risk factors for eating disorders
    include being overly concerned about physical
    appearance, worrying about perceived
    attractiveness, and feeling social pressure in
    favor of thinness

12
  • Bulimia nervosa
  • An eating disorder characterized by repeated and
    uncontrolled episodes of binge eating, usually
    followed by purging, which is self-induced
    vomiting and/or the use of large quantities of
    laxatives and diuretics

13
  • The stomach acid in vomit eats away at the teeth
    and may cause them to rot, and the delicate
    balance of body chemistry is destroyed by
    excessive use of laxatives and diuretics
  • The bulimic may have a chronic sore throat, as
    well as a variety of other symptoms, including
    dehydration, swelling of the salivary glands,
    kidney damage, and hair loss
  • Like anorexics, bulimics have high rates of
    obsessive-compulsive disorder

14
Expression of Emotion
  • Range of emotion
  • Development of facial expressions
  • Consistency of emotional development across
    individual infants and across cultures supports
    the idea that emotional expression is inborn
  • Basic emotions
  • fear, anger, disgust, surprise, happiness or joy,
    sadness or distress

15
Experiencing Emotion
  • Gender differences in experiencing emotion
  • Men, more than women, experience jealousy over
    evidence or suspicions of sexual infidelity
  • A women is more likely than a man to be jealous
    of her partners emotional attachment and
    commitment to another and over the attention,
    time, and resources diverted from the relationship

16
  • Love
  • Triangular theory of lovethree components
    intimacy, passion, and commitment singly and in
    various combinations produce seven different
    kinds of love
  • Likingintimacy
  • Infatuated lovepassion
  • Empty lovecommitment
  • Romantic loveintimacy and passion
  • Fatuous lovepassion and commitment
  • Companionate loveintimacy and commitment
  • Consummate loveintimacy, passion, commitment
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