Module 1: L1-4 - intro Flashcards
Give a definition of emotions.
No generel agreement, but comprise of components of:
At least:
1) a physiological reaction to a stimulus, 2) a behavioral response, 3) a feeling (although this is a subjective experience of an emotion),
And maybe also:
4) influence cognitive processing, 5) can be triggered by emotionally salient stimuli, 6) unintentionality, 7) evolutionary purpose, and 8) a social and relational aspect: communication
How are emotions and mood different?
Emotion: comprise many components, discrete
Mood: diffuse, longer-lasting subjective feelings
What are the three categorize of emotions?
Basic, complex and dimensional theories of emotion
Give a brief description of basic emotions.
A closed set of emotions, each with a unique set of characteristics, carved by evolution and reflected through facial expression
Explain the concept of universal facial expressions.
Ekman: showed pics of american actors expressing different emotions to a tribe in New Guinea –> they recognized the emotions
Americans also recognized the emotional expressions of the tribe
What are the 6 basic emotions according to Ekman?
happy, sad, fear, anger, disgust, and surprise
What are some examples of emotion generation theories?
- James-Lange: emotions are feed-back responses of physiological responses (run first –> afraid later)
- Cannon and Bard: believed there are too many emotions for James-Lange theory to be true - parallel processing, one does not cause the other
- Lazarus: risk-benefit appraisal (cause of emotion is both the stimulus and its significance)
- Singer and Schachter: mix of all three above - emotional arousal and then reasoning are required to appraise a stimulus before an emotion can be identified
What are some theories of basic emotions?
- Darwin: human expression of emotion resembled those of “lower” animals - based on the asumption that facial expressions are observable, automatic manifestations corresponding to a person’s inner feelings
- Ekman: disagreeing with Darwin - 1) emotions varries from an unpleasant-pleasant scale, 2) relationship between facial expression and what it signified was socially learned, and 3) the meaning of facial expressions varried among cultures –> he found out, however, that facial expressions did not vary from culture to culture => 6 basic emotions, that are innate, universal and short-lasting
What are emotional biases?
The tendency for the information
processing system to consistently
favor stimulus material of a
particular emotional valence
- automatic and implicit
How are memory and attention a bias?
Attention:
- Emotional triggers –> higher attention
- Negative info is prioritized
- Attention in involuntary oriented towards emotionally salient info
Memory:
- Negative emotions (danger) does not make the memory more accurate, but more vivid
Describe the role of the amygdala in implicit emotional learning.
- a patient with amygdala impairment does not show a physiological response prior to “fear response”, but remembers the trigger - fails to develop conditioned response
- underlie fear conditioning
Describe what role the amygdala seems to play in the processing of emotional facial expression
The amygdala contributes to direct visual attention to the eyes when encountering any facial expression (bottom-up)
- activation response to fearfull facial expressions is bigger (concious cognition is not involved)
- patients with amygadala lesions cannot detect fear in facial expressions, as fear is identifies by an increase in size of the white region of the eyes (top-down)
Describe what role the insula seems to play in the processing of emotional facial expression.
Insula may play a broad role in associating cognitive and affective process
(valence and arousal are decreased in patients with impaired insula)
Give some examples of physiological measures of emotional processing.
fMRI, HR, electrodermal activity (sweat), respiratory rate, subjective emotional response, EEG
Give some examples of behavioral measures of emotional processing.
Fear conditioning and emotional attentional blink