Emotions Study Deck Flashcards
3 Parts to Emotion
- Physiological response
- Expressive behavior
- Consciousness of the experience
James-Lange Theory
Physiological response occurs first, and then you feel emotions
Cannon-Bard Theory
Physiological response and feeling emotions occur simultaneously
Schachter’s and Singer’s Two-Factor Theory
Emotion depends on the interaction between two factors, physical arousal and a cognitive label
Brain’s Pathway for Emotions
-Ledoux and Zajonc
-Stimulus either goes the high or low road
Low Road
Some emotions are immediate and occur without conscious appraisal
High Road
Emotions occur when we appraise situations as harmful or dangerous
Physical Arousal
-Different emotions stimulate different facial expressions & muscles
-Each emotion involves distinct neural circuits in the brain
Polygraph
-Measures changes in blood pressure, perspiration, heart rate, respiration & pulse
Universal Emotion Recognition
-Our ability to recognize and produce associated facial expressions appears to be universal
-Even people that are born blind exhibit the same facial expressions during emotional experiences, suggesting that emotion is not only learned but are linked to muscle activation
Microexpressions
-Facial expressions that last a fraction of a second
-Likely signs of concealed emotions
Dr. Paul Ekman
-Facial feedback hypothesis
-Feeling happy shows happy, and showing happy can cause you to fell happy
Adaption-Level Phenomenon
Tendency to quickly adapt to a new situation until it becomes the norm
Relative Deprivation
Perception that you’re worse off than the other people you compare yourself to
General Adaptation Syndrome (GAS)
-Developed by Hans Selye
-Body’s natural adaptive response to stress
3 Parts
^Part 1: Alarm
^Part 2: Resistance
^Part 3: Exhaustion