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Media and emotion

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What is emotion? Widely disputed, so we need to simply choose a position. emotion is a complex of beliefs, arousal and valence of affect – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Media and emotion


1
Media and emotion
  • Lightly covered terrain

2
What is emotion?
  • Widely disputed, so we need to simply choose a
    position
  • emotion is a complex of beliefs, arousal and
    valence of affect

3
Features of emotion
  • Emotions are typically conscious phenomena
  • They typically involve pervasive bodily
    manifestations
  • They vary in intensity, type and range of
    intentional objects, valence
  • They can undermine rationality
  • They contribute to defining our ends and
    priorities
  • They have a central place in moral education and
    the moral life.
  • Wikipedia

4
  • You dont always have control over your emotions
  • Emotions drive action
  • Emotions organize cognitive and behavioral
    processes
  • Motivational

5
What determines which emotion we are feeling?
  • Miron The dedicated neural pathway that is being
    stimulated.
  • Different pathways are excited depending upon the
    emotion.
  • However In some cases the paths are quite
    similar and therefore the individual must
    identify the emotion based on an evaluation of
    the cause and situation (anger v. fear)

6
The experience of emotion
  • Psychophysiological effects are often autonomic
    in that they do not require thinking
  • May override more logical, evaluative brain
    functions when the emotional intensity is high
  • Feelings are learned along with situations,
    people, etc.
  • Similar people or situations may bring about the
    same feelings and the same feelings may bring
    about memories of the situations or people they
    were encoded with

7
Physical responses to emotion
  • The body frequently responds to Shame by warmth
    in the upper chest and face, Fear by a heightened
    heartbeat, increased "flinch" response, and
    increased muscle tension. The sensations
    connected with anger are nearly indistinguishable
    from fear. Happiness is often felt as an
    expansive or swelling feeling in the chest and
    the sensation of lightness or boyancy, as if
    standing underwater. Sadness by a feeling of
    tightness in the throat and eyes, and relaxation
    in the arms and legs. Desire can be accompanied
    by a dry throat and heavy breathing.

8
Innate emotions
  • Basic emotions are hard-wired into our brains.
  • Fight or flight reactions
  • Fear
  • Anger
  • Lizard brain emotions

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Evidence for the innateness of (some) emotions
  • Similar forms demonstrated among species
  • Similar form from childhood to adulthood
    expressed before learning can take place
  • Similar across cultures
  • Similar in blind and sighted people.
  • http//emotion.bme.duke.edu/Emotion/EmoRes/Psych/C
    ogExp/Behav.html

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Social emotions
  • Emotions that allow you to interact with others
    effectively and to maintain social bonds
  • Love
  • Friendship
  • Empathy
  • Learned early through the positive relationships
    between mom and food, etc.
  • Located in old mammalian brain

17
Relations to others
  • Much of emotion is based on our relationships
    with others
  • Interactions with others
  • Observation of others
  • Thoughts about others
  • A range of relations between audience members and
    media personas has been proposed, with varying
    emotional implications

18
Major emotions
  • Sadness/sorrow
  • Sources
  • Loss of significant other/love/affiliation
  • Empathy for those in pain/poor circumstance

19
  • Anger
  • Frustration
  • Control by outside force

20
  • Fear
  • Threat
  • Darkness, snakes and spiders
  • Socially-learned fears

21
Robert Plutchiks model of primary and derived
emtions
22
Why havent emotions been replaced with higher
order thinking?
  • Miron Survival value maintained anger, sorrow,
    love, fear, etc. until the development of
    civilization. There are still advantages for
    several of the emotions in that they provide
    coherence of thought, feeling and action in
    regards to general situationsanger for
    frustration, love for sexuality and nurturance,
    fear for self-preservation in the face of a
    threat.

23
What are emotions for?
  • Emotions are essential to decision-making
  • Emotions can still be helpful in driving behavior
    effectively and efficiently

24
Influence of culture
  • Culture provides a wide range of objects and
    rewards that can tie emotion to behaviors,
    beliefs, experiences, etc.
  • Cultures differ in their evaluation of varied
    beliefs and behaviors, and individual emotions
    are influenced by those differences

25
Emotion and entertainment
  • Entertainment usually is tied to being moved by
    a media experience
  • Arousal
  • Though it is clear that entertainment and emotion
    are closely tied, the nature of the relationship
    is not well understood

26
Why are we drawn to emotional content?
  • Miron Arousal (a component of emotions) is
    inherently pleasurable
  • The main driving force for human action is to
    seek pleasure and avoid pain
  • Arousal stimulates the release of dopamine, a
    sort of natural drug within the brain

27
Why are we drawn to emotional content?
  • Emotions are encoded along with cognitions,
    perceptions, behaviors and outcomes. When we
    encounter similar cognitions, etc., the linked
    emotions are called upespecially when a lack of
    some important condition is identified (food,
    warmth, sex)

28
Why are we drawn to emotional content?
  • Zillmann We enjoy watching the good guys
    rewarded and the bad guys punished. The
    enjoyment is enhanced by the wrong thing
    happening prior to an appropriate conclusion

29
Physical elements that affect arousal
  • Movement/camera movement
  • Volume/speed of sound
  • Cut speed
  • Camera angle/distance

30
Content elements that affect emotion
  • Threats
  • Spiders
  • Snakes
  • Spoiled food
  • Music
  • Major/minor
  • Learned associations
  • Characters
  • Identification/liking
  • Emotion presentation
  • Plot
  • Justice
  • Objects of emotional attachment
  • Flags, Statue of Liberty

31
Explaining the effects of imagination
  • Philosophers forward two basic accounts to
    explain the effects that the imagination has upon
    us.
  • Simulation theory employs a computer analogy,
    saying that imagining something involves one
    having one's usual emotional response to
    situations and people, only the emotions are
    running off-line.
  • Our emotions are aroused, but we do not feel a
    need to take action

32
  • This could explain why we enjoy watching things
    on the screen that we would hate seeing in real
    life.
  • Horror shows
  • Tear jerkers
  • Simulation theorists say that when we experience
    an emotion off-line that would be distressing in
    real life, we may actually enjoy having that
    emotion in the safety of the off-line situation.

33
Problems
  • Why would experiencing distressing emotions
    offline end up being pleasurable?
  • They do not provide a convincing explanation
  • Can we draw upon some of the cognitive work,
    sociobiology for this?
  • What does it mean for emotions to be running
    off-line?

34
Thought theory
  • An alternative account of our emotional response
    to imagined scenarios has been dubbed the thought
    theory. This view says that we can have emotional
    responses to mere thoughts.
  • Anger can be brought about by hearing of an
    injustice

35
  • Thus, our emotions are brought about by the
    thoughts that occur to us as we are watching a
    film. When we see the dastardly villain tying the
    innocent heroine to the tracks, we are both
    concerned and outraged by the very thought that
    he is acting in this way and that she is
    therefore in danger.
  • We are aware that we are witnessing merely
    fictional situations, so there is no temptation
    to take physical action.
  • As a result, there is no need, says the thought
    theorist, for the complexities of simulation
    theory in order to explain why we are moved by
    the movies.

36
But . . .
  • Why should a mere thought draw an emotional
    response from us?
  • We are quite capable of being aware of horrific
    things happening to people yet be unmoved by that
    knowledge.
  • Since we can't have full-fledged beliefs about
    the fictional characters in films, the thought
    theory needs to explain why we are so moved by
    their fates.

37
Emotional engagement
  • Philosophic discussion of viewer involvement
    with films starts out with a puzzle that has been
    raised about many art forms Why should we care
    what happens to fictional characters? After all,
    since they are fictional, their fates shouldn't
    matter to us in the way that the fates of real
    people do. But, of course, we do get involved in
    the destinies of these imaginary being. The
    question is why.
  • Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

38
Emotional engagement
  • One answer, common in the film theory tradition,
    is that the reason that we care about what
    happens to some fictional characters is because
    we identify with them. Although or, perhaps,
    because these characters are highly idealized
    they are more beautiful, brave, resourceful, etc.
    than any actual human being could be viewers
    identify with them, thereby also taking
    themselves to be correlates of these ideal
    beings. But once we see the characters as
    versions of ourselves, their fates matter to us,
    for we see ourselves as wrapped up in their
    stories.
  • Stanford Dictionary of Philosophy

39
However
  • We exhibit a wide variety of attitudes toward the
    fictional characters we see projected on the
    screen.
  • We have emotional reactions to characters with
    whom we did not identify.

40
  • The general outline of the answer philosophers
    of film have provided to the question of our
    emotional involvement with films is that we care
    about what happens in films because films get us
    to imagine things taking place, things that we do
    care about. Because how we imagine things working
    out does affect our emotions, fiction films have
    an emotional impact upon us.
  • Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

41
Media influences over emotion
  • Sound/music
  • Major/minor key
  • Melody/dissonance
  • Volume
  • Dynamics
  • Speed
  • Timbre
  • Sharpness
  • Orchestration/richness

42
Music and emotion
  • Leonard Bernstein borrowed from Chomskys ideas
    and applied them to music, claiming that there is
    an innate code buried in the musical structure
    which we are biologically endowed to understand.
  • He tried to show how the underlying strings, the
    basic meanings behind music, are transformed by
    composers into the surface structure of a
    composition.

43
  • Bernstein thought that the main difference
    between language and music is that music
    amplifies the emotions more effectively, thereby
    making it more universal.

44
Expression rules research
  • Many have assumed that the greatest part of the
    emotional power of music comes in the variations
    of tempo, dynamics, and articulation. Several
    researchers have also assumed that these
    variations conform to structural principles and
    have attempted to demonstrate these expression
    rules.

45
  • Paul Hindemith wrote that tempi that match the
    heart rate at rest (roughly 60-70 beats per
    minute) suggest a state of repose. Tempi that
    exceed this heart rate create a feeling of
    excitation. He wrote that mood shifts in music
    are faster and more contrasting than they are in
    real life.

46
Happy and sad classical music
  • Children and adults were asked to rate classical
    music that was manipulated in tempo and minor v.
    major key as sad or happy

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Video influences over emotion
  • Pacing
  • Camerawork
  • Movement
  • Distance
  • Focus
  • Color

49
Babies one year old react to emotions on TV
  • Experiment with toys and televised examples of
    positive and negative emotions being demonstrated
    in facial expressions
  • 1-year olds react to negative but not positive
    expressions
  • No difference for 10-month olds
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