Title: Motivation and Emotion
1Motivation and Emotion
2AP Outline
- VIII. Motivation and Emotion (79)
- Biological Bases
- Theories of Motivation
- Instinct, Drive Reduction, Optimal Arousal,
Incentive Theories - Hunger- Eating Disorders Thirst, Sex, Social
Cultural Factors, Sexual Orientation and Pain - Social Motives, Achievement Motivation,
- Theories of Emotion, James-Lange Theory,
Cannon-Cognitive Theory Characteristics, Biology
of Emotion, Emotional Expressions - Stress
3Basics of Motivation
- There are links between motives and emotions
- Basic motives- Hunger-thirst are monitored within
the brain - Activities/motives are related to needs for
stimulation and to maintain arousal
4Definition of Motivation
- The factors that influence? initiation,
direction, intensity persistence of behavior -
- Why do we do what we do?
- Behavior is based partly on the desire to feel
certain emotions. - How is motivation exemplified by Hunger, sexual
desire and Need for Achievement? - Motivation ? effects emotion example- hunger and
irritibility
5Motive
- A reason or purpose that provides a single
explanation for diverse behaviors. - Some psychologists think of motivation as an
intervening variable- - Intervening variable is something that is used to
explain the relationship between environmental
stimuli and behavioral responses.
64 Categories of Motivation
- Biological Factors- Autonomic Nervous System
- Emotional Factors- panic, fear, anger, love,
hatred - Cognitive Factors- perceptions, beliefs,
expectations - Social Factors other people, influence from
parents, friends, teachers, TV, SiblingsFactors-
7Theories of Motivation (web)
- Instinct- (see one page overview)
- Drive Reduction-
- Optimal Arousal-
- Incentive-
8Basic Model of Motivation
- Dynamics of behavior in the way actions are
- Initiated
- Sustained
- Directed
- Terminated
9Example of Food Seeking
- Initiated by bodily need
- Search was sustained
- Action directed by possible sources
- Terminated by attained goal
10The Model (Motives)
- Motivational Activities- begin with needs
- Need is an internal deficiency
- Needs cause -? Drive energized state that
facilitates a need - Drives --?activate a response an action or
series of actions to attain a goal - Goals are targets of motivational behavior
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12Difference between Needs and Drives
- Needs are stronger than drives
- Drives fluctuate in strength
13External Stimuli
- Motivated behavior can be energized by the pull
of External Stimuli - And push of internal needs
14Action is a Mix
- Internal needs and External Incentives
- (types of conflicts are associated)
- Incentive value of goals helps us understand
motives that dont come from internal needs - Example success status-approval
15Types of Motives 3 Categories
- Primary-(innate)
- Based on biological needs
- Must be met for survival
- Hunger, thirst, pain avoidance
- Air, sleep
- Elimination of waste
162. Stimulus Motives (not necessarily for survival)
- Need for stimulation
- Need for information
- Activity
- Curiosity
- Exploration
- Manipulation
- Physical contact
17Motive 2- Stimulus
- Not necessary for survival
- Stimulus Drives reflect need for
- Need for stimulation
- Need for information
- Activity curiosity
- Exploration- manipulation
- Physical contact
- Sensory input
183. Secondary Motives (learned motives)
- Learned needs or drives and goals
- Making music
- Competing
- Learned needs for power
- For affiliation
- Status
- Security
- Approval
- Achievement
- Fear Aggression are learned
19Arousal Theory
- Says ideal levels of activation exist for various
activities - Arousal refers to activation of body nervous
system - Zero_at_death.com no arousaldeath
- Low during sleep or boredom
- Moderate during daily activities
- High at times of excitement, emotion, panic, fear
and anxiety
20Levels of Arousal
- We perform best when we have a Moderate level of
Arousal - Not too passive/not too anxiousPerformance
- Inverted U Function
- Says at low levels of arousaldecrease
performance - More arousal improved performance
21Levels of Arousal 2
- Ideal level arousal depends on complexity of the
task - Simple tasks--?Best for arousal to be high
- Complex tasks ? best for low/moderate arousal
22Yerkes-Dodson Law
23Sensation Seekers
- People learn to seek particular levels of arousal
- Sensation seeking scale Thrill adventure
seeking - Experience seeking
- Disinhibition
- Boredom Susceptibility
-
24 Motive 3-Secondary Motives
- Learned motives
- Learned needs or drives and goals
- Making musicCompeting
- Learned need for
- Power
- Affiliation
- Status
- Security
- Approval
- Achievement
- Fear aggression are learned
25Primary Motive is Homeostasis
- Biological needs- direct much of our behavior
- Are used to maintain body balance Homeostasis
- Hunger (motive) is a regular cycle each day
- Good example of how internal and external factors
direct behavior - Liver affects hunger
26Hunger 2
- Stomach size some indication of hunger
- Glucose- level in blood and
- hypoglycemia low blood sugar level
- Feeling of hunger causes stomach contractions
- Liver sends nerves signal to brain ? desire to eat
27Primary Motives Continued
- Thirst, Sex, and pain avoidance
- Thirst 2 kinds
- Extra-cellular thirst- when water is lost from
fluids surrounding cells - Bleeding, vomiting, sweating, drinking alcohol
- Intra-cellular thirst
- Salt level
- Draws fluid out of cells
28Pain-
- Drive to avoid painepisodic
- Takes place at certain episodes when body is or
is about to be damaged - Prompts us to avoid pain
- Pain tolerance- is learned- raise of lower
tolerance
29Brian Mechanisms
- There are many parts of brain associated with
motivation
30Hypothalamus
- does regulate motivation and emotion
- Thirst, hunger, sexual behavior
- Is sensitive to sugar in the blood
- Receives neural messages from liver and stomach
- One part signals hunger feeding system
- Which initiates eating
31Hypothalamus 2
- Lateral hypothalamus- (hunger feelings)
- When electrified causes animals to eat
- If destroyed no eating
32Ventro-Medial Hypothalamus
- Part of Hypothalamus relates directly to Satiety
(fullness) feelings stop mechanism - If destroyed overeating
- (Bottom medium part of the hypothalamus)
- Marijuana-Mary-Jane causes a hypothalamic
response Munchies
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34Paraventricular Nucleus of Hypothalamus
- Affects hunger helps keep blood sugar level
steady - Both- starts and stops eating
- Sensitive to Neuropeptide Y (NPY)
- Large amount hunger
35Glucagon -Like Peptide 1 (GLP1)
- Causes eating to cease
- Released by intestines
- After eating a meal
- In blood then to brain
- 10 minutes after eating- (eat slow eat less)
36Set Point- Thermostat
- When fat levels rise
- Leptin- Fat cells release-?tells brain to stop
eating. - The body is homeostatic when we are at the set
point and then it is activated to reach the set
point when we fall below.
37Taste Aversion
- Associated with nausea
- Classical conditioning
- Biological tendency- associate food with sickness
- Protective
38Eating Disorders
- Anorexia Nervosa
- Adolescent Females lt5-10 malegt
- Severe Dieting
- Compulsive attempt to lose weight
- Do not seek or desire food
- 1 in 20 die of malnutrition
- Bulimia Nervosa
- Gorge on food then vomit
- Take laxatives to avoid weight gain
39Causes of Bulimia Anorexia
- Women dissatisfied with bodies
- Distorted view of themselves
- They think theyre fat, exaggerated fears of
becoming fat. - Distorted Messages from media
- Compulsion- comparing to models
- Distorted body image
- Perfect daughter control issues
- Shame, guilt, self contempt, anxiety
40Treatment of Eating Disorders
- Medical diet
- Behavioral Counseling- self monitoring of food
intake - Extinction training (to end the learned behavior)
urge to vomit - Cognitive approach-
- Change the thinking patterns belief system
about weight body image - Usually people need outside support and urging
from family
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42Sex Drive
- Sex Drive ones motivation to engage in sexual
behavior - Mammals- female-hormone- Estrus Heat
- Caused by Estrogen
- Male animals
- Ready to mate
- sex drive aroused by behavior sent of
receptive female
43Human Sex Drive
- Non-Homeostatic- it works independent of bodily
need - Sex drive in men is related to ?amount of
Androgens male hormone - Produced by testes
- (puberty- increases supply of androgens)
44Women Sex Drive
- Produce Androgens? causes increase in sex drive
45Human Sex Drive
- Human sex Drive can be aroused at anytime
- Sexual activity- does not prevent sexual desire
- Sex drive can be aroused Reduced
- The Coolidge Effect
- Male sex drive can be aroused repeatedly with new
sexual partners. -
46Circadian Rhythms
- Internal Biological Clocks
- 24 hour cycle
- Guide Body Activity
- Liver
- Kidney
- Blood Pressure
- Endocrine Glands
Peak During Day Adrenaline is 3-5x higher
47Test Anxiety Pg 445
48Learned Motives
- We learn to pursue excellence
- Reinforcers-
- Praise money, success--?affect goals and desires
49Opponent Process Theory
- Richard Solomon (1980)
- Explains learned motives
- Example drug addiction
- If a stimulus causes a strong emotion ltFear or
Pleasuregt an opposite emotion tends to occur when
stimulus ends - Stimulus of pain Pain ends ?relief
50Opponent Process Theory 2
- Pleasure Drug use end of drug use
- Pleasure ends craving discomfort develops
- In love feel good when lover is present
- Take away lover discomfort when they are not
there - If stimulus is repeated- our response is
habituated (gets weaker) - Emotional after affects get stronger with
repetition (example- depression when drug use
ends)
51Social Motives
- Success, money, possessions, status, love,
approval, grades, power - Acquired through conditioning socialization
- Due to learned needs
52Need For Achievement (nAch)
- A desire to meet an internal standard of
excellence - People strive to do well- in any situation which
evaluation takes place - People for high need for achievement enjoy
challenges chances to test abilities
53Need For Achievement (NACH)
- Mclelland- could predict behavior of high and low
achievers. - Characteristics of
- People with high (nAch) dont seek goals that are
too easy - Avoid goals that are too risky
- Complete difficult tasks to get grades
- Excel in occupations
- Work harder when they dont do well
54Achievers- Key To Success
- Benjamin Bloom
- Identified via a study
- Found ? drive and determination success
55Achievers- Parents Support Success in Children
- Parents expose children to music, swimming,
science, (ideas for fun) (Stimulating
environment more synapses) - Talent is nurtured by dedication hard work
- Support childs special interest
- Emphasize doing ones best at all times
- Coaching and encouraging practice
56Achievers- Self Confidencepeople believe they
can reach a goal
- Set goals that are specific and challenging but
attainable - Visualize the steps you need to reach your goal
- Advance with small steps
- Get expert instruction
- Find skilled models to emulate
- Get support encouragement
- If you fail- regard it as a sign you need to try
harder
Self Confidence affects Motivation--- Duh
57Abraham Maslow
Described a Hierarchy of Human needs
Self actualizing Full use of personal potential
58- Base of Pyramid Necessary for survival
- Pre-potent Dominant over higher needs
- Deficiency Motives- Activated by a lack of
food, water, security, love, esteem, or other
basic need.
59- Growth needs-
- Positive- life enhancing for personal growth.
- Meta needs-
- Higher needs, Tendency for self-actualization
60Meta Needs
- We tend to move up to Meta needs
- A person who meets survival needs then moves to
meta needs if these are unfulfilled - They are in a Syndrome of Decay
- Characterized by despair, apathy, and Alienation
61- Syndrome of decay- when we cannot reach our
higher other needs - Most people are concerned with esteem, love,
security, but they dont get much past that.
62Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motives
- Intrinsic motivation- we act without any obvious
external rewards. You are motivated on your own
part. high achievers - Extrinsic- external rewards enhance motivation-
ex money, grades, approval
63Creativity Motivation
- Creativity is enhanced by personal interest and
freedom of choice. Killed when you are limited
(surveillance, rules, conforming) - Working to get money not being creative
64Children and intrinsic motivation
- If basic skill is lacking, extrinsic activity can
help develop intrinsic motivation.
65Basics of Emotion
- Emotions help us to adapt to environment
- physiological arousal
- Emotional Knowledge self awareness
- Empathy
- Can manage feelings
- We can use emotions
- Romantic love is in this chapter
66Emotions
- Help and can cause problems- hate, anger, fear
- Disrupts behavior and damages relationships
- Physiological- bodily responses
- Posture, tone, facial expressions, body language
emotional outward expressions
67Sympathetic nervous system
- ANS responses to emotion. Sympathetic activates
emotion, arousal, fight or flight - Parasympathetic- opposite. Slows down the
reaction and conserves energy.
68Plutchik
- Plutchiks 8 primary emotions
- Fear, surprise, sadness, disgust, anger,
anticipation, joy, and trust/ acceptance - They fluctuate in intensity and can be mixed and
yield to another emotion (hybrid emotion) - Moods are tied to circadian rhythms.
69Brain and Emotion
- Positive emotion left hemisphere.
- Negative emotion right hemisphere.
- Some emotional processing cerebral cortex
- Amygdala fear
70Facial Expressions
Expressing Emotions Psychologists believe that
emotional expressions evolved to communicate our
feelings to others which aids survival People
more sensitive to angry, scheming thinking,
faces Basic Facial expressions seem to be
universal
71Cultural Differences in Emotion
- Asian cultures- group harmony is important
- -? Anger is not a public emotion
- America and Western Europe Anger is common
- ?reflects values of independence rights
- justice
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