Title: Emotion Unit Overview
1EmotionUnit Overview
- Theories of Emotion
- Embodied Emotion
- Expressed Emotion
- Experienced Emotion
- Stress and Health
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that section in the presentation.
2Theories of Emotion
3Theories of emotions
- Emotion
- Physiological arousal
- Expressive behavior
- Conscious experience
- Common sense theory
4Theories of emotions
5Theories of emotions
6Theories of emotions
7Theories of emotions
8Theories of emotions
9Theories of emotions
- Two-factor theory
- Also knows as Schachter-Singer Theory
10Theories of emotions
- Two-factor theory
- Schachter-Singer
11Theories of emotions
- Two-factor theory
- Schachter-Singer
12Lets try this out
- You are camping and enjoying a nice picnic lunch.
All of a sudden a bison jumps out of the woods
and begins chasing you. Attack caught on tape- 1
min - Lets review and write out what would happen in
the following theories
James Lang Theory-
Cannon Bard Theory-
Two Factor Theory-
13Emotions and the Autonomic Nervous System
- Autonomic nervous system
- Sympathetic nervous system
- arousing
- Parasympathetic nervous system
- Calming
- Moderate arousal is ideal
14Emotions and the Autonomic Nervous System
15Emotions and the Autonomic Nervous System
16Emotions and the Autonomic Nervous System
17Physiological Similarities Among Specific Emotions
- Different movie experiment
- Four rooms with four different movies- From
control center the subjects perspiration, heart
rate, and breathing were measured - Movie 1- horror film
- Movie 2- anger provoking film
- Movie 3- film that evokes sexual arousal
- Movie 4- boring film
18What did this study show us?
- Very little difference in the physiological
response your body has to such different
emotional and cognitive responses from the
different film. (Except the boring film)
19Physiological Differences Among Specific Emotions
- Differences in brain activity
- Amygdala- higher activity when experiencing fear
- Frontal lobes- more active when experiencing a
positive mood - Nucleus accumbens- in left frontal lobe. A neural
pathway the increases dopamine levels.
Electrical stimulation in depressed patients has
shown increased smiles, laughter, and giddy
euphoria
20Are you lying?
- Polygraph- a machine, commonly used in attempts
to detect lies, that measure several of the
physiological responses accompanying emotion
(such as perspiration and cardiovascular and
breathing changes).
21Dont call me a liar..
- Polygraphs are not very valid if you think about
it - Our physiological arousal is much the same from
one emotion to another - Many innocent people have been falsely accused
because their emotions were heightened when they
took the polygraph - Many rape victims fail lie detectors when
telling the truth about their assailants
22Does it ever work?
- No spy has never been detected by the FBI or CIA
even though both agencies spend million of
dollars a year testing their own employees - The guilty knowledge test works- a person is
shown photos or given certain information
specific to a crime scene while on the lie
detector test. - This does show change in physiological response
and can be effective.
23Cognition and EmotionCognition Can Define Emotion
- Spill over effect- emotions can spill over from
one event to another. Think about the level of
emotion from a major sports victory to a riot. - Schachter-Singer experiment- with adrenaline
shots - Arousal fuels emotions, cognition channels it
24Detecting Emotion
- Nonverbal cues are usually enough for most of us
to detect an emotion but we can often be tricked
if one does not pay close attention to small
details - Lifting the inner part of your eyebrow, which is
hard to consciously do reveals worry . - Eyebrows raised and pulled together signal fear
- Lets try something out..
25Which smile is real and which one is fake?
26The smile on the right is real
27Gender, Emotion, and Nonverbal Behavior.. Which
person is a male or a female?
28The faces are gender neutral
- But. People were more likely to view the face
on the left as male because it looks more angry
29So what does this mean?
- Your gender interprets how you view others
emotion - It is normal to want to empathize with people to
interpret their emotions and that empathy is
based on your own gender and biases
30Here is an example
- The following chart comes from a study that
measured how many facial expressions a viewer
displayed by watching different films. - As you will see it shows that women show their
emotions more easily and guys are harder to read
31See for yourself
32Culture and Emotional Expression Are nonverbal
expressions of emotions universally understood?
- The meaning of gestures varies with culture
- Many of our facial expression displays rules and
are evident throughout cultures - Lets take a look at the next slide and see how
we do
33- From left to right, top to bottom happiness,
surprise, fear, sadness, anger, disgust
34How does the culture effect how one displays
emotion?
- Cultures that encourage individuality like U.S
display visible emotions - In Chinese cultures, which encourage people to
adjust to others, personal emotions are much less
visibly displayed
35Lets see how well we do when interpreting others
facial expressions and emotions
- Facial Expression Test
- Reading Faces Test
- I will now pause this clip and want to see if we
can come up with a consensus on what each of you
think the emotion is - What would you do Clip
36Levels of Analysis for the Study of Emotion
37Levels of Analysis for the Study of Emotion
38Levels of Analysis for the Study of Emotion
39Levels of Analysis for the Study of Emotion
40The Effects of Facial Expressions
41Some more examples of the effects of facial
feedback
- One study used Botox injections to paralyze the
frowning muscles of 10 depressed patients. Two
months later, 9 out of 10 non frowning patients
were no longer depressed. - This study needs more replication to be validated
42The psychology of fear
43What is the function of fear?
- Fear is adaptive. Its an alarm system that
prepares our body to flee from danger - man texts into a bear
- Fear can bind groups together
- Fear helps us focus on a problem and rehearse
coping strategies
44How is fear learned?
- Observational Learning is a major factor
- The Amygdala- Nerves running out of from these
knots of neural tissue, one on either side of the
brains center, carry messages that control heart
rate, sweating, stress hormones and attention
that rev up in threatening situations
45Amygdala and Fear
- Rabbits learn to react with fear to a tone that
precedes an impending small shock unless their
Amygdala is damaged. - Rats that have their Amygdala deactivated show
no fear learning - Humans with damage to the Amygdala can sometimes
not even experience fear! - Amygdala and Fear Clips- 7 min (safari)
46Do Something That Scares You
- What is the best way to overcome your fears?
- Do Something That Scares You Article
- What are your thoughts on the article?
- What is one quote that stood out to you?
47Conquering your fear
- Smash Fear- Ask Ted- 16 min
- Consider
- How hard is it to overcome your own fears?
- Why?
- While watching the film please record and create
a top five advice from overcoming your fear from
what you learned from the clip.
48Anger
49Anger
- Evoked by events, often times the anger is worst
the event that caused" it - Catharsis
- Expressing anger can increase anger
- Can lead to heart disease
50Happiness
- Happiness
- Feel-good, do-good phenomenon
- Well-being
51HappinessThe Short Life of Emotional Ups and
Downs
52HappinessWealth and Well-Being
53HappinessWealth and Well-Being
54HappinessTwo Psychological Phenomena Adaptation
and Comparison
- Happiness and Prior Experience
- Adaptation-level phenomenon
- Happiness and others attainments
- Relative deprivation
- Think of upward comparison
- Would be better if we used downward comparison
55Lets look at some research
- European 8-12 year olds with cerebral palsy
experience normal psychological well being - Studies show it takes about five weeks after
being diagnosed with HIV to feel much less
emotionally distraught - Is happiness really just a state of mind?
- Do we place to much emphasis on our environments
role in happiness?
56HappinessPredictors of Happiness
57How to be happier
- Realize that happiness may not come from
financial success - Take control of your time
- Act happy
- Get enough sleep
- Give priority to close relationships
- Record your gratitude and count your blessings
- Have a level of spirituality
58Some Research
- Lets take a look at Does Money Buy Happiness?
- Once done Create a top five to do list of being
happy based on everything you learned today.
Every piece of advice must be based on the
information presented not just your opinion - Optional Assignment- Do an article critique on
the article. The article and instructions are on
my website under the Article Critique Link
59Introduction to Stress!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
- Health psychology
- Behavioral medicine
60Stress and Illness
61Stress and IllnessThe Stress Response System
- Selyes general adaptation syndrome (GAS)
- Alarm
- Resistance
- exhaustion
62Stress and IllnessGeneral Adaptation Syndrome
63Stress and IllnessGeneral Adaptation Syndrome
64Stress and IllnessGeneral Adaptation Syndrome
65Stress and IllnessGeneral Adaptation Syndrome
66Stress and IllnessStressful Life Events
- Catastrophes
- Significant life changes
- Daily hassles
67Stress and the Heart
- Coronary heart disease
- Type A versus Type B
- Type A
- Type B
68Which one are you?
69Stress and Susceptibility to Disease
- Psychophysiological illnesses
- Psychoneuroimmunology (PNI)
- Lymphocytes
- B lymphocytes
- T lymphocytes
- Stress and AIDS
- Stress and Cancer
70The End
71Definition Slides
72Emotion
- a response of the whole organism, involving (1)
physiological arousal, (2) expressive behaviors,
and (3) conscious experience.
73James-Lange Theory
- the theory that our experience of emotion is
our awareness of our physiological responses to
emotion-arousing stimuli.
74Cannon-Bard Theory
- the theory that an emotion-arousing stimulus
simultaneously triggers (1) physiological
responses and (2) the subjective experience of
emotion.
75Two-factor Theory
- the Schachter-Singer theory that to experience
emotion one must (1) be physically aroused and
(2) cognitively label the arousal. - This is very similar to Cannon Bard theory except
this time a cognitive appraisal or thought needs
to trigger the emotional response
76Polygraph
- a machine, commonly used in attempts to detect
lies, that measure several of the physiological
responses accompanying emotion (such as
perspiration and cardiovascular and breathing
changes).
77Facial Feedback
- the effect of facial expressions on experienced
emotions, as when a facial expression of anger or
happiness intensifies feelings of anger or
happiness. - For example The woman was asked to touch the
golf tees together forcing her to frown. - When showed scenes of war, sickness, and start
without the tees a level of sadness was reported.
- That level of sadness was increased when the
scenes were shown with the artificial frown
78Catharsis
- emotional release. The catharsis hypothesis
maintains that releasing aggressive energy
(through action or fantasy) relieves aggressive
urges. - Expressing anger can sometimes calm us down but
only if the anger is directed against the
provoker, it is justified, the target is not
intimidating and little guild is felt afterwards
79Feel-Good Do-Good Phenomenon
- peoples tendency to be helpful when already in
a good mood.
80Well-being
- self-perceived happiness or satisfaction with
life. Used along with measures of objective
well-being (for example, physical and economic
indicators) to evaluate peoples quality of life.
81Adaptation-level Phenomenon
- our tendency to form judgments (of sounds, of
lights, of income) relative to a neutral level
defined by our prior experience. - We adapt to our current level of achievement or
happiness, consider it normal, and require
something better to have another surge of
happiness - Consider getting a new t.v (surge), getting a
raise (surge). Having the surge wear off and
wanting more
82Relative Deprivation
- the perception that we are worse off relative
to those with whom we compare ourselves. - Consider Alex Rodriguez signed a 10 year 275
million dollar contract. Another player would
then feel bad about their 20 million dollar
contract who played the same position
83Behavioral Medicine
- an interdisciplinary field that integrates
behavior and medical knowledge and applies that
knowledge to health and disease.. - Health psychology is a branch of behavioral
medicine
84Health Psychology
- a subfield of psychology that provides
psychology's contribution to behavioral medicine. - Asks How do our emotions and personality
influence our risk of disease? - What attitudes and behaviors help prevent illness
and promote health and well being?
85Stress
- the process by which we perceive and respond to
certain events, called stressors, that we
appraise as threatening or challenging.
86General Adaptation Syndrome (GAS)
- Selyes concept of the bodys adaptive response
to stress in three phases - Stage One- Alarm- Mobilize resources- you
experience an alarm reaction due to the sudden
activation of your sympathetic nervous system - Stage Two- Resistance- Cope with stressor- Your
temperature, blood pressure and respiration
remain high - Stage Three- Exhaustion- Reserves depleted- Now
you are more vulnerable to illness, or even in
extreme cases collapse or death
87Coronary Heart Disease
- the clogging of the vessels that nourish the
heart muscle the leading cause of death in North
America. - Correlation between prolonged stress and heart
disease
88Type A
- Friedman and Rosenmans term for competitive,
hard-driving, impatient, verbally aggressive, and
anger-prone people.
89Type B
- Friedman and Rosenmans term for easygoing,
relaxed people.
90Psychophysiological Illness
- literally, mind-body illness any
stress-related physical illness, such as
hypertension and some headaches.
91Psychoneuroimmunology (PNI)
- the study of how psychological, neural, and
endocrine processes together affect the immune
system and resulting health.
92Lymphocytes
- the two types of white blood cells that are
part of the bodys immune system B lymphocytes
form in the bone marrow and release antibodies
that fight bacterial infections T lymphocytes
form in the thymus and other lymphatic tissue and
attack cancer cells, viruses, and foreign
substances.