chapter 10 Flashcards
the value of emotion to a functional approach
emotions are useful because they help people adapt to their environment
basic emotions
are experienced by people everywhere, and each consists of three elements: a subjective feeling, a physiological change, and an overt behaviour
example of subject feeling, physiological change, overt behaviour
there’s a thunderstorm and you realize your roommate took your umbrella. subjectively you feel anger, physiologically you’re heart beats faster and behaviourally you might scowl
many scientists believe that young babies experience
broad positive and broad negative emotional states
by approximately 6 months of age infants
are thought to experience all basic emotions
social smiles
smiles that appear when infants see another human face, usually beginning at about 2 months of age
what negative emotion appears between 4 and 6 months
anger is one of the first negative emotions to emerge from generalized distress
stranger wariness
an infants apparent concern or anxiety in the presence of an unfamiliar adult, typically observed at about 6 months of age
infants tend to be less fearful of strangers when
the environment is familiar and more fearful when it is not.
as babies learn to interpret
facial expressions and recognize when a person is friendly, their wariness of strangers declines
self-conscious emotions
emotions such as pride, guilt, or embarrassment that involve feelings of success when one’s standards or expectations are met and feeling of failure when they aren’t; emerge between 18 to 24 months of age
regret and relief
some 5 and 6 year olds experience regret and relief and by the age of 9 most children experience both emotions appropriately
in many asian countries outward displays of
emotion are discouraged in favour of emotional restraint
american vs asian studies on emotions
american 11 month old cried and smiled more often than Chinese 11 month old
american preschoolers were more likely than chinese to smile at funny pictures and to express disgust after smelling a cotton swab dipped in vinegar
cultures differ in the events that trigger emotions
situations that evoke pride in one culture may evoke embarrassment or shame in another
when can infants first identify emotions in others
possibly as early as 4 months and definitely by 6 months infants begin to distinguish facial expressions associated with different emotions
infants tend to pay more attention to faces that
are showing negative emotions and pay attention to them longer than emotionless or happy faces