L8 - Emotions: Cognitive Factors Flashcards
1
Q
What are the multiple roles of cognition in emotion?
A
- Labelling or arousal in Schachters’s two factor theory
- Other cognitive accounts of emotion emphasis is on the generation of emotion
- These are not mutually exclusive
2
Q
What is the appraisal theory? (Overall)
A
- Emotion is based on an appraisal of the meaning and significance of an event
- Lazarus is one of the most influential appraisal theorists
3
Q
What is the appraisal theory?
A
- Primary: whether something of relevance to the person’s well-being has occurred (happened to me?)
- Secondary: what it is, what coping options do we have, will it harm, and how can I overcome it (good/bad), changes character
- Reappraisal: Takes a longer time before it is accepted in the mind. Constructed by the mind to regulate emotional distress or protect one’s ego identity, what situations will be recall that memory
4
Q
What is the role of appraisal in the emotional process?
A
- Each emotional reaction is a function of a particular kind of cognition or appraisal
- Frijda says emotions arise in response to the meaning structures of given situations; different emotions arise in response to different meaning structures
5
Q
Describe Primary appraisal:
A
- Goal relevance
- Goal congruence/incongruence
- Type of ego-involvement e.g self-esteem or moral values
6
Q
Describe secondary appraisal:
A
- Blame/credit
- Coping potential
- Future expectancy
7
Q
How to test if emotion is caused by appraisal?
A
- Empirical evidence
- Lab experiments
- Correlational studies
8
Q
What was the lab experiment by Speisman?
A
- Ppts shown a film titled subincision depicting adolescent aborigins undergoing circumcision rituals
- Different voiceovers used to manipulate viewers appraisal of film’s emotional context
- Intellectualisation: detached perspective
- Denial: occasion for joy rather than pain
- Trauma: Emphasised unpleasant aspect of procedure
- Emotional response measured in terms of physiological measures: skin conductance and heart rate
9
Q
Results for Skin conductance levels in Spieisman?
A
- If aroused and adrenaline = sweat = skin is a better conductor
- Those in trauma condition, line is a lot higher, can indicate cognitive preparation = appraisal was conducted
- Intellectualisation dampened and had a lower skin conductance
10
Q
What was correlational evidence?
A
- Ppts recalled autobiographical episodes of each of 15 emotions and answered questions about them
- Each episode was them rated for pleasantness, degree of own versus others responsibility/control, uncertainty, attentional activity, anticipated effort, degree of situational control
- Different emotions were associated with distinctive appraisal profiles
11
Q
Results of correlational evidence?
A
- Appraisal profiles built for anger, guilt and pride
- Anger = unpleasant and effort is high, others are low
- Guilt = unpleasant and responsibility is high
- Pride = Responsibility is high, other factors are low
- Characteristics of emotions = can work out quality of emotions
12
Q
What were problems of the lines of evidence above?
A
- In experimental research: no measure of appraisal, unsure what is exactly being manipulated, strength of emotion is shown to vary but not the quality
- In correlational research: no manipulation, dependent on memory, are we aware of ongoing appraisals?, what about emotions with sudden onset?
13
Q
What are alternative causal sequences?
A
- Feedback from face and body
- Affective primacy: preferences need no inferences, we can form evaluations without being aware of having been exposed to stimuli
- Context: In many everyday situations, there is no need to appraise what is happening: context provides enough info for emotion to occur, just requires an env trigger
14
Q
What is the mere exposure effect? (Exp)
A
- Stimuli were Japanese ideographs: seen 0, 1, 3, 9, 27 times
- Ppts made recognition and liking judgements
- Relationships between the measures were then examined
- Exposure influenced affect independently of recognition
- The ideographs you see more often you like better than the rarer ones, the ones I see more, the ones I recognise better, however those you remember well are not the same you like most
15
Q
How does appraisal affect well-being? (Exp)
A
- Analysed transcripts of interviews with partners of men who died from aids
- Interviews analysed to extract measures of appraisals, goals, emotions and plans
- Looked at primary measures: positives belief appraisals, positive appraisals of goal outcomes, pos emotions, overall pos appraisals
- 4 measures of psychological well-being: positive morale, positive states of mind, depressive mood and impact of death
- 2 measurement moments: at bereavement and 12 mo later