Emotion Flashcards

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1
Q

Emotions involves changes in:

A
  • physiology
  • conscious experience
  • motivation
  • behavioural changes
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2
Q

Physiological changes

A

autonomic nervous system
- sympathetic nervous system
- parasympathetic nervous system

hormones
muscular responses

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3
Q

Emotions of Valence

A

positive: joy, contentment, calm
negative: fear, anger, disgust, sadness

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4
Q

Emotions of Arousal

A

High: fear, anger, joy, desire
Low: arousal, contentment, calm, sadness, boredom

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5
Q

Emotions of Direction

A

Approach-related: anger, joy, desire
Avoidance-related: fear, disgust

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6
Q

James-Lange Theory

A

Stimulus → physiological arousal → emotion
- perception of responses = emotional feeling
- physiological reaction happens before the emotion is recognised

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7
Q

Cannon’s Criticisms of James-Lange Theory

A
  • Bodily responses are not necessary
  • Responses are same for all emotions
  • Insensitive internal organs & feedback
  • Responses are too slow to cause feeling
  • Artificial inducement of arousal does not cause feeling
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8
Q

Cannon’s Emergency Theory

A
  • Emergency reaction to need for energy
  • Flight or fight
  • Body’s role less important than in James-Lange Theory

Cannon - all emotions have same physio
- Body changes occur simultaneously with emotional experience
- Thalamic processes contribute to feeling

Perceived external stimulus → physiological arousal and emotion same time (Cannon-Bard)

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9
Q

Two-Factor Theory (Schachter/Singer)

A
  • physiological arousal
  • cognitive labelling (arousing –> interpret external cues –> label emotions)
  • Physiological arousal and cognitive labelling essentially co-occur
  • Have the same pattern of physiological arousal regardless of the emotion (like Cannon)
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10
Q

Excitation Transfer

A

→ when arousal occurs, it takes time to decay
→ during decay, person may incorrectly identify source of arousal, and transfer arousal to another source
→ misattribution of arousal to incorrect source
→ transfer occurs when persons are less aware of arousal

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11
Q

Primacy Debate: Appraisal or Emotion

A

Lazarus: appraisals determine feelings
Zajonc: emotional experience may occur before appraisal

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12
Q

Autonomic Nervous System Arousal with Different Emotions

A
  • Emotional facial expressions cause subjective experience of emotion
  • Heart rate was more accelerated with anger, fear and sadness than with disgust and surprise
  • Happy accelerated HR more than surprise
  • Skin conductance – fear and disgust were larger than happy and surprise
  • Finger temp – anger greater than fear
  • Higher quality voluntary facial configurations associated with stronger autonomic faces
  • Self-reported emotion not necessary for autonomic differences
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13
Q

Neural Pathways of Fear

A

emotional stimulus –> sensory thalamus –> sensory cortex high or low road to amygdala
—> emotional responses

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14
Q

Amygdala Influence of Emotional Responses

A

projects to other parts of the brain that influence these responses

To:
- Neocortex
- Hipp
- Monoamine System
- Bodily Responses

both direct and indirect consequences of amygdala activation

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15
Q

Facial Feedback Hypothesis (Laird)

A
  • The facial expression of an emotion may produce congruent emotional experience
  • E.g. posing an angry facial expression may create or intensify the feeling of anger
  • Several studies revealed that posing a facial expression of a discrete emotion created/ intensified the emotional experience
  • Posing facial expressions of discrete emotions also influenced judgements of other stimuli
  • “Smiling” caused cartoons to be rated as more humorous compared to frowning
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16
Q

Behavioural Factors of Emotion

A

Families of Emotion
- classes of emotion states that share characteristics in terms of subjective feelings
- subtle differences within family/class
- anger: linguistic exemplar of irritation, rage, fury

17
Q

Hormones and Human Emotion

A

Oxytocin - involved in affiliation, trust
Testosterone - angry aggression, low empathy
Cortisol - involved in stress, anxiety
Rarely 1-to-1 relationship between psychological & physiological variables
- oxytocin does not only cause affiliation
- affiliation is caused by more than oxytocin

18
Q

Sociocultural Factors of Emotion

A
  • Basic emotion expressions are universally recognised
  • Basic emotion expressions are innate (blind, children)
  • Display rules vary across cultures