Title: Expressed%20and%20Experienced%20Emotion
1Expressed and Experienced Emotion
2Detecting Emotion
- All of us communicate verbally and nonverbally.
- Experience can sensitize us to particular
emotions. - Abused children are much quicker than other
children at recognizing the signals of anger.
Anger
Fear
50 Anger 50 Fear
3Detecting Emotions
- Our brains can easily detect subtle expressions.
- A glimpse of a face for just one tenth of a
second is enough for people to judge somebody's
trustworthiness.
4Detecting Emotion Deception
- While out brains are very good at detecting most
emotions one emotion we are not very good at
detecting is deception or deceiving expressions. - The common belief is that you can tell if
somebody is lying by looking them in the eyes. - When tested people were only 54 accurate at
telling if somebody was lying by looking them in
the eyes. This is slightly better than a coin
toss or chance. - However some people are more sensitive to
physical cues of deception.
5Detecting Emotion Technology
- Gestures, facial expressions, and tones of voice
are all absent in electronic communication. - This is why it is easy for many people to misread
text or emails.
Actual Facebook status updates
dang it.. when when I said lets go have dinner i
did not mean it as a date...
Why in the world are you mad??? Wait i know... I
didn't put lol after that last statement so you
took it wrong
He just said I love you and I texted back I
love YOUTUBE real fast. I dont feel the same ?
6Gender and Emotion Women
- Is womens intuition superior to mens?
- Women generally surpass men at reading peoples
emotional cues. - This nonverbal sensitivity also gives women an
edge in spotting lies. - Women also have a greater emotional literacythey
can describe more complex emotional reactions. - -Examplemales might say I feel bad, females
might say It will be bittersweet, I will fill
happy and sad - -This could also be explained by the fact that
women generally use more vocabulary during the
day than men.
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9Gender and Emotion Anger
- Imagine an angry face
- Now is that face male or female?
- 75 of the people in an Arizona State University
study said male. - Anger is an emotion that many people associate
with males even though many people see females as
being more emotionally expressive.
10Gender and Emotion Empathy
- Women are likely to describe themselves as
empathic however, in a study that measured the
physiological effects of empathy they found that
there is a much smaller gap than is reported in
surveys. - Females are more likely to express their empathy
than males.
Although males and females did not differ in
self-reported emotions or physiological responses
while viewing emotional films, the women's faces
showed much more.
11Culture and Emotional Expression
- Are nonverbal expressions of emotion universally
understood? - Some are and some are not
- The American thumps up and A-OK signs are
considered insults in other countries.
12Culture and Emotional Expression
- Facial expressions are somewhat universal.
- A smile is a smile world wide
- Simple facial expressions
- Even isolated groups of people share universal
facial expressions. - Facial expressions even among the blind are
universal. - Lets see how good you are at detecting emotions
from facial expressions from people in different
cultures!
13What Emotion is This?
HAPPINESS
14What Emotion is This?
SURPRISE
15What Emotion is This?
FEAR
16What Emotion is This?
SADNESS
17What Emotion is This?
ANGER
18What Emotion is This?
DISGUST
19Culture and Emotional Expression
- Although cultures share a universal facial
language for basic emotions, they differ in how
much emotion they express. - Cultures that encourage more individuality
display more visible emotions.
20The Effects of Facial Expressions
- Do our facial Expressions influence our feelings?
- Expressions not only communicate emotion, they
also amplify and regulate it. - Try itfake a big smile
- Now Scowl
- Facial Feedback the effect of facial
expressions on experienced emotions. - When a facial expression intensifies emotional
feelings. - Pencil Experiment
- Botox Experiment
21Experienced Emotions
- How many emotions are there?
- Carroll Izard identified 10 basic emotions
- Joy
- Excitement
- Surprise
- Sadness
- Anger
- Disgust
- Contempt
- Fear
- Shame
- Guilt
- All other emotions are combinations of these 10
emotions
22Fear What is the function of fear?
- Fear can be debilitating and contagious.
- 1903 Chicago theatre fire.
- Fear is the bodies alarm system.
- Fear also protects us from harm.
- Fear of punishment can restrain us.
- Common fear against enemies can also cause groups
of people to bond. - Fearful expressions also improve sensory
reactions by improving peripheral vision and
speed eye movements.
23Learning Fear
- Through our experiences and possibly conditioning
we learn to fear many things. - Learning by observation can also expand our list
of fears. - Almost all wild monkeys fear snakes, yet lab
monkeys do not. - This means that we may learn many of our fears
from parents or friends.
24Biology of Fear
- We may be biologically prepared to learn some
fears more quickly than others. - Monkeys, snakes, and flowers
- Humans quickly learn to fear snakes, spiders, and
cliffs because these are fears that probably
helped our ancestors to survive.
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26Biology of Fear
- The Amygdala is crucial in learning fears.
- Rabbits, tones, and shocks
- People with phobias show high Amygdala activity
and people that are very courageous show low
Amygdala activity. (There are always extremes) - Phobia an intense fear of a specific objects or
situations.
27Biology of Fear
- Experience does help to shape our fears, however
so do our genes. - In twins, ones level of fearfulness is similar to
the others, even when they have been raised
apart. - We have also discovered a gene that influences
the amygdalas response to frightening
situations. - People with the short version of this gene have
less levels of a protein that speeds up reuptake
of serotonin. - With more serotonin available to activate the
amygdala neurons, people with this short gene are
more fearful.
28ANGER!
- Societies that are more individualistic tend to
vent their anger or experience catharsis. - Catharsis emotional release
- Catharsis Theory Releasing anger (through
action or fantasy) relieves aggressive urges. - Can be temporarily calmingbut most of the time
this will just cause more anger. - Venting to reduce anger is like using gasoline
to put out a fire.
29Anger
- Best ways to handle anger
- Time and waiting
- Do not deal with anger in ways that cause you to
sulk or rehearse your anger. - Calm your self by exercising or playing an
instrument or talk to a friend. - Forgiveness is the best way to deal with anger
30Happiness
- People who are happier perceive the world as
safer, feel more confident, make decisions more
easily, are more cooperative and tolerant, and
live healthier more satisfying lives. - Feel-good, do-good phenomenon People are more
likely to be helpful when in a good mood.
31Happiness Cycle
- Positive moods rise over the early to middle part
of the day. - Stressful events trigger bad moods. But by the
next day the gloom nearly lifts away. - People usually rebound from bad days to a better
than usual day. - In the long run our mood tends to balance.
32Wealth and Well-being
- Well-being self-perceived happiness or
satisfaction with life. - Money can buy some happiness
- Richer countries are somewhat happier than poorer
ones. - Once one has enough money to provide for their
basic needs gaining more and more money will
matter less and less.
33Happiness and Prior Experience
- Adaptation-level phenomenon our tendency to
judge various stimuli relative to those we have
previously experienced. - If your current income increases we will feel an
initial surge of pleasure and then adapt to this
new level of income and consider it normal.
34Happiness and Others
- Happiness is relevant not only to our past
experiences but also to our comparisons with
others. - Relative deprivation the perception that we are
worse off relative to those whom we compare
ourselves. - When expectations rise above attainments
happiness drops.
35Predictors of Happiness