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Emotion Module 12
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Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Dec 27, 2015

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Page 1: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Emotion

Module 12

Page 2: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

What are emotions?What are emotions?

full body responses, involving:

1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate)

2. expressive behaviors (smiling, pouting)

3. conscious experiences (thoughts about experience)

Page 3: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Debates in Emotion ResearchDebates in Emotion Research

Which comes first, physiological arousal or the subjective experience of an emotion?

Can we react emotionally before appraising a situation, or does thinking always precede emotion?

Page 4: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Theories of Emotion: Historical Approaches

Page 5: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Common Sense TheoryCommon Sense Theory

1. emotion-arousing stimulus leads to 2. a conscious feeling (fear, anger) and 3. a physiological (physical) response

Example: Seeing an angry dog (stimulus) triggers feelings of fear (conscious feeling) and physical responses such as trembling.

Page 6: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

James-Lange TheoryJames-Lange Theory

an emotion-arousing stimulus in the environment triggers a physiological reaction

awareness of the physiological reaction leads to our experience of an emotion

Page 7: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,
Page 8: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Cannon-Bard TheoryCannon-Bard Theory

an emotion-arousing stimulus simultaneously triggers both a physiological response and the experience of an emotion

Page 9: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,
Page 10: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Theories of Emotion: Cognition and Emotion

Page 11: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Two-Factor TheoryTwo-Factor Theory

Emotions involve two factors: a physiological arousal a cognitive label of the arousal

Page 12: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,
Page 13: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Which Baby is Which?Anger, Disgust, Fear, Interest, Joy, Surprise, Sadness

Page 14: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Which Baby is Which?Anger, Disgust, Fear, Interest, Joy, Surprise, Sadness

Joy Anger Interest

Disgust Surprise Sadness Fear

Page 15: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Think about this…

Higher levels of testosterone are linked to aggression.

So… does aggression cause testosterone levels to

increase? OR do high levels of testosterone cause

aggression? OR does some third factor cause both of them?

Page 16: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Theories of Emotion: ReviewTheories of Emotion: Review A) Common Sense D) Two-Factor B) Richard Lazarus E) James-LangeC) Robert Zajonc F) Cannon-Bard

1) emotion is our awareness of our physiological responses to an emotion-arousing stimulus

2) an emotion-arousing stimulus simultaneously triggers (1) physiological responses, and (2) experience of emotion

3) to experience emotion one must (1) be physically aroused, and (2) cognitively label the arousal

4) some emotions don’t require conscious thought, but there must be a minimum of unconscious thought to know what we’re reacting to

5) not all emotions involve deliberate thought; some emotions skip the thinking part of the brain and go directly to the amygdala

6) emotion-arousing stimulus leads to a conscious feeling (fear, anger) and a physiological response.

Page 17: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

The Expression of Emotion:

Nonverbal Communication

Birthday Scramble Activity

Page 18: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Robert ZajoncRobert Zajonc cognition (thinking) is not necessary for all

emotions

some emotions skip the thinking part of the brain (cerebral cortex) and go directly to the amygdala

How is this similar to reflexes?

Page 19: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Two Paths to Emotional ResponsesTwo Paths to Emotional Responses

Page 20: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Richard LazarusRichard Lazarus

agreed some emotions do not require conscious thought

BUT, there must be a minimum of unconscious thought to know what we’re reacting to

Page 21: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Cartoon Ranking Activity

Rank the following cartoons on a scale of

1 (not very funny) - 10 (very funny)

Page 22: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Cartoon A

Page 23: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Cartoon B

Page 24: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Cartoon C

Page 25: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Cartoon D

Page 26: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Cartoon E

Page 27: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Cartoon F

Page 28: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Cartoon G

Page 29: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Cartoon H

Page 30: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Cartoon I

Page 31: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Cartoon J

Page 32: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Cartoon Ranking Activity

Average your scores for the 10 cartoons

Which side do you think will have the higher average? Why?

Do we smile because we are happy or are we happy because we smile?

Page 33: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Think about this…

Do some emotions have similar physiological responses? Which ones? What types of physical responses do they elicit?

Is it possible to have these physiological responses without an emotion-arousing stimulus?

Page 34: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Nonverbal CommunicationNonverbal Communication communicating feelings without words:

facial expressions tone of voice hand gestures

also called “body language”

FYI: Studies show that during interpersonal communication: 7% of the message is verbally communicated 93% is non-verbally transmitted

38% is through vocal tones 55% is through facial expressions

Page 35: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Analyzing Nonverbal CommunicationAnalyzing Nonverbal Communication

Page 36: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Analyzing Nonverbal CommunicationAnalyzing Nonverbal Communication

Page 37: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Analyzing Nonverbal CommunicationAnalyzing Nonverbal Communication

Page 38: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Analyzing Nonverbal Communication: Analyzing Nonverbal Communication:

Historical ExampleHistorical Example (1960 Presidential Election)

Page 39: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

The Expression of Emotion: Gender Effects on Emotion

Page 40: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Gender EffectsGender Effects

women are better at reading the nonverbal communication of emotion

women tend to express emotions more than men do

Page 41: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Display RulesDisplay Rules

cultural rules governing how and when a person may express emotion

vary greatly from culture to culture

(examples of other cultures’ display rules)

Page 42: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

Facial ExpressionsFacial Expressions

Paul Ekman studied facial expressions to determine if they are inborn or culturally based

research shows that certain basic expressions are common to all cultures

Page 43: Emotion Module 12. What are emotions? full body responses, involving: 1. physiological arousal (increased heart rate) 2. expressive behaviors (smiling,

“Primal Fear: Our Deepest Fears Revealed”

Video: What are the body’s physiological responses to fear?

Your conclusion: How does cognition (our thoughts) contribute to the experience of fear?

Your conclusion: How would each of the 6 contemporary psychological perspectives explain the experience of fear?