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Chapter 10: Motivation and Emotion

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Title: Chapter 10: Motivation and Emotion


1
Chapter 10 Motivation and Emotion
2
Agenda 1.31.11
  • Drill what motivates you?
  • To get good grades?
  • To eat healthily?
  • To exercise?
  • To listen to your friends?

3
Motivational Theories and Concepts
  • Motives needs, wants, desires leading to
    goal-directed behavior
  • Drive theories seeking homeostasis (push theory
    pushes you towards balance)
  • Incentive theories regulation by external
    stimuli (pulls you towards a reward)
  • Evolutionary theories maximizing reproductive
    success

4
Figure 10.2 The diversity of human motives
5
The Motivation of Hunger and Eating Biological
Factors
  • Brain regulation
  • Lateral and ventromedial hypothalamus -- LH was
    thought to be the hunger center, while the VMH
    was thought to be the satiety center
  • Paraventricular nucleus part of hunger circuit
  • Glucose and digestive regulation
  • Glucostatic theory blood sugar down, hunger up
  • Hormonal regulation
  • Insulin and leptin -- insulin goes up and hunger
    goes up, leptin tells hypothalmus when fat
    storage is high to decrease hunger.

6
Figure 10.3 The hypothalamus
7
The Motivation of Hunger and Eating
Environmental Factors
  • Learned preferences and habits
  • Exposure
  • Exposure and observational learning appear to
    play a part in what we like to eat. Learning
    also appears to influence when and how much
    people eat
  • When, as well as what
  • Food-related cues
  • Appearance, odor, effort required
  • Stress
  • Link between heightened arousal/negative emotion
    and overeating

8
Eating and Weight The Roots of Obesity
  • Evolutionary explanations -- most animals evolved
    in environments where competition for food was
    fierce and food supplies were unreliable
  • Obesity people are overweight if their weight
    exceeds their ideal body weight by 20.
  • Genetic predisposition
  • Body Mass Index and adoption study -- adoptees
    resemble biological parents, not adoptive
  • The concept of set point/settling point --
    natural point of stability in body weight
  • Dietary restraint

9
Figure 10.5 The heritability of weight
10
Agenda AP Psychology
  • 2.2.11

11
  • List 5 characteristics that attract you to
    someone. Include physical characteristics.
  • Good looking (taller than me!)
  • Good sense of humor
  • Smart/intelligent
  • Has to have some sort of passion in something
  • Drive/ambition
  • Homework bring in 3 magazine or newspaper
    advertisements
  • Make sure you read 374 413 by next Friday

12
Sexual Motivation and Behavior
  • Hormonal regulation
  • Estrogens
  • Androgens
  • Testosterone -- testosterone fluctuations are
    correlated with sexual activity.
  • Pheromones -- chemical secreted by one animal
    that affects the behavior of another, usually
    detected through the sense of smell
  • Synchronized menstrual cycles
  • Aphrodisiacs -- substances thought to increase
    sexual desire
  • Erotic materials -- elevate sexual desire only
    for a few hours
  • Attraction to a Partner
  • The Coolidge effect -- a new sexual partner
    reviving sexual interest is termed the Coolidge
    effect.
  • Evolutionary factors women and men prioritize
    different things in their partners.

13
Figure 10.6 Rape victim-offender relationships
14
Figure 10.7 Parental investment theory and
mating preferences
15
Figure 10.8 The gender gap in how much people
think about sex
16
Figure 10.10 Gender and potential mates
financial prospects
17
Figure 10.11 Gender and potential mates
physical attractiveness
18
The Mystery of Sexual Orientation
  • Heterosexual Bisexual Homosexual
  • A continuum -- 5-8 of population
  • Theories explaining homosexuality
  • Environmental
  • Biological
  • Interactionist

19
Figure 10.12 Homosexuality and heterosexuality
as endpoints on a continuum
20
Figure 10.13 How common is homosexuality?
21
Figure 10.14 Genetics and sexual orientation
22
The Human Sexual Response
  • Masters and Johnson 1966
  • Stages
  • Excitement
  • Plateau
  • Orgasm
  • Resolution

23
Figure 10.15 The human sexual response cycle
24
Figure 10.16 The gender gap in orgasm consistency
25
AP Psychology Agenda
  • 2.3.10

26
  • Get your ads out. On the next slide is something
    called Maslows hierarchy of needs. Using all
    three ads, figure out how each ad appeals to one
    of these needs. Write the need down with a brief
    explanation.
  • I am collecting this!
  • For tonight, go to http//www.utpsyc.org/TATintro/
    and take the mini-TAT test

27
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28
Achievement Motivation
  • Achievement motive need to excel
  • Work harder and more persistently
  • Delay gratification
  • Pursue competitive careers
  • Situational influences on achievement motives
  • Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)

29
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32
The Elements of Emotional Experience
  • Cognitive component
  • Subjective conscious experience
  • Positive psychology
  • Physiological component
  • Bodily (autonomic) arousal
  • Behavioral component
  • Characteristic overt expressions

33
Figure 10.20 The amygdala and fear
34
Figure 10.22 Cross-cultural comparisons of
peoples ability to recognize emotions from
facial expressions
35
AP Psychology Agenda
  • 2.7.11

36
  • Test tomorrow
  • Make sure you really read 398 407 (we didnt
    really talk about it in class)
  • Can you come up with a list of no more than 10
    basic emotions that everyone experiences?
  • happy, sad, scared, angry, embarrassed, anxious,
    horny, stressed, jealousy, excitement
  • Do we have control over our emotions?
  • Extrinsic versus intrinsic motivations whats
    the difference and which is more important?

37
Theories of Emotion
  • James-Lange
  • Feel afraid because pulse is racing
  • Cannon-Bard
  • Thalamus sends signals simultaneously to the
    cortex and the autonomic nervous system
  • Schacters Two-Factor Theory
  • Look to external cues to decide what to feel
  • Evolutionary Theories
  • Innate reactions with little cognitive
    interpretation

38
Figure 10.23 Theories of emotion
39
Figure 10.24 Primary emotions
40
Happiness
  • Common sense notions incorrect
  • Income, age, parenthood, intelligence, and
    attractiveness largely uncorrelated
  • Physical health, good social relationships,
    religious faith, and culture modestly correlated
  • Love, marriage, work satisfaction, and
    personality strongly correlated
  • Subjective rather than objective reality important

41
Figure 10.27 The subjective well-being of nations
42
Figure 10.29 Possible causal relations among the
correlates of happiness
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