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Psych 180

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Psych 180 Pleasure and Positive Experience Lecture 2 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Psych 180


1
Psych 180
  • Pleasure and Positive Experience
  • Lecture 2

2
What is pleasure?
  • Can be anything from intense sharp pleasure
  • Orgasms, rush
  • Mellow diffuse pleasure
  • Relaxing while listening to the ocean

3
Who cares about pleasure?
  • Higher emotions possibly signal safety and
    provide the opportunity to build and consolidate
    psychological skills
  • Some of the most crucial and basic behaviors are
    pleasurable
  • Eating
  • Drinking
  • Sex
  • Important for the survival of the species

4
What about the non-biological pleasures?
  • Socializing, experiencing relationships
  • Also crucial for survival of the species
  • People that have stronger social networks thrive
    more

5
Lack of pleasure
  • Psychology mainly focused research here
  • Referred to as anhedonia
  • Possibly biological
  • Improper brain structures and chemical levels

6
What do we know about pleasure?
  • There are degrees of pleasure
  • Not necessarily easy to rate on a 7-pt scale
  • We can still compare things (which is more
    pleasurable)
  • Pleasure is multidimensional
  • Can include positive and negative aspects
  • Something bittersweet
  • Pleasures can result from adding something or
    subtracting something
  • Removing discomfort can be very pleasurable
  • Pleasure can be in the present or in the past
    (memories) or in the future (hopes)

7
Peak-end theory
  • Recollection of pleasure is NOT a simple summary
    of the individual moments
  • What is important is the most extreme rating
    throughout the experience and the rating before
    it ended
  • What doesnt seem to matter is how long the
    experience lasted
  • Known as duration neglect

8
PRESENT THIS BEFORE THE THEORY ITSELF
9
Experiments
  • Colonoscopy experiment from Authentic Happiness
  • Two groups
  • Group 1 Hand in ice cold water for 60 seconds
  • Group 2 Hand in ice cold water for 60 seconds,
    plus an extra 30 seconds in the same water that
    had the temp raised 1 degree
  • Which group found it more pleasurable?
  • Group 2

10
Peak-end theory continued
  • Just be careful
  • A 20 minute vacation that has a strong high and
    ends well may not be all that satisfying or
    enjoyable
  • From the text And in the sexual domain,
    duration neglect has a different and decidedly
    dysfunctional definition

11
Song activity
  • In notebooks

12
Question
  • How much would you pay for Dr Smiths Rio Hondo
    coffee mug?
  • Lets say I give you each one of these mugs. Now
    I want it back. How much would I have to pay you
    to get it back?

13
How accurate are people at predicting future
pleasures and behaviors?
  • Not very
  • Mere exposure effect
  • Having heard or seen something before makes you
    more likely to like it
  • You dont even have to be aware that you have
    heard or seen it before (Zajonc, 1998)
  • Endowment effect
  • We will bestow a greater worth in an object if we
    have it than if we dont have it, even if the
    object is the same

14
Other inaccuracies about pleasure
  • People are inaccurate when predicting how long
    their pleasure or pain may last
  • People consistently overestimate how long these
    feelings will last
  • People are extremely inaccurate about predicting
    their future happiness as well (Daniel Gilbert)
  • People constantly adapt to where they are
  • The same pleasurable experience for a second,
    third, or fourth time yields less pleasure than
    the first time
  • Proposed hedonic treadmill
  • Constantly have a changing baseline that we
    compare our well-being and happiness to

15
BRING SOME OF SELIGMANs AH in here about
adaptation
16
Positive Psychology and Emotions
  • More complex than a feeling
  • An emotion implies that they may drive us to a
    purpose (root is motion)
  • Negative emotions
  • Probably selected for evolutionarily
  • Fear accompanies the avoidance of danger
  • Fight or flight
  • Have an immediate reaction that accompanies them
  • Anger leads to fighting
  • Sadness leads to crying

17
Positive emotions
  • Immediate reaction isnt there
  • Barbara Fredrickson believes that these emotions
    provide safety in the present so that we can
    better prepare ourselves for the future
  • Positive emotions allow for a focus on broader
    concepts and not necessarily the here and now
  • Broaden and build theory

18
Fredrickson and Branigan (2005)
  • Showed college students films to produce either
  • Amusement, contentment, anger, anxiety
  • Students that saw amusement or contentment were
    more likely to see global patterns not the local
    ones

19
Positive emotions even undue negative ones
  • College students given a task that raised anxiety
  • Told to write a speech and would be videotaped
    and evaluated
  • Before though, they were shown film clips to
    induce certain emotions
  • Those that saw the positive emotions had more
    rapid recovery of their heart rates than those
    that saw a sad or neutral film

20
Three questions about broaden and build theory
  • Do different positive emotions work better or
    worse for broaden and build?
  • What about emotions that are pleasurable but work
    against broaden and build (like lust, pride)?
  • What about individual differences of personality?
  • Some of us can easily become happy and others
    arent quite as easily altered
  • How do the studies account for this?

21
Moods vs emotions
  • Moods are more trait-like
  • Emotions are more state-like

22
Hedonic capacity
  • The ability to experience positive feelings
  • Possibly rooted in genetics
  • Possibly linked to extraversion
  • Now called positive affectivity

23
PANAS
  • Positive and Negative Affect Schedule
  • Present people with positive moods and negative
    moods
  • Inspired vs ashamed
  • Ask them to rate how it describes themselves
  • Possibly right now, over the past few days, or in
    general
  • Positive words are averaged together and the
    negative words are averaged together
  • Get a score of positive affectivity and a score
    of negative affectivity

24
Affectivity
  • Seems to be stable across weeks, months, years
    and decades
  • grumpy old men may well have been testy young
    men, petulant youth, whiny toddlers and difficult
    babies
  • Seems to also be stable across situations too
  • Levels of variability are also stable
  • Some people fluctuate a lot
  • Others rarely fluctuate

25
Positive vs Negative The differences
  • More likely to be extraverted, socially active,
    have more friends, more acquaintances, more
    involved in organizations
  • More likely to be married (happily married too),
    like their jobs
  • More likely to be spiritual or religious
  • Heritability index of around .4
  • Chart on pg 64

26
Flow
  • Similar to the idea of being in the zone
  • The experience of working at full capacity
  • Began by looking at people that did things for
    intrinsic reasons
  • People that do things for enjoyment have an
    engagement that is quite similar to each other,
    even though they are doing different things

27
Components of flow
  • Take from AH
  • Usually happens in voluntary activities but can
    happen at work as well

28
What do we know about flow?
  • Some people have lots of flow
  • Others dont
  • Families that provide challenging activities and
    support for their kids experience more flow
  • Early schooling experiences targeting identifying
    interests and skills may lead to more flow

29
If you have more flow as a youth
  • You are more likely to achieve with creative
    domains later in life
  • Possibly linked to health
  • Weak source here though- unpublished dissertation
  • NEED TO ADD MORE FROM THE ACTUAL BOOK ?

30
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