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Emotion Motivation and Emotion
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Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

Dec 18, 2015

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Cynthia Dawson
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Page 1: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

Emotion

Motivation and Emotion

Page 2: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

• Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. 

• It is a reflection of our mental state.

Page 3: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

The James-Lange Theory

• William James and Carl Lange theorized that we feel emotion because of biological changes caused by stress.

Page 4: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

• So if I jump out and scare the behoovies out of you, your heart begins to race and that bodily change causes you to feel fear.

Page 5: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

• In the 1880s, two theorists, psychologist William James and physiologist Carl Lange, independently proposed an idea that challenged commonsense beliefs about emotion.

Page 6: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

• This idea, which came to be known as the James-Lange theory, is that people experience emotion because they perceive their bodies’ physiological responses to external events.

Page 7: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

• According to this theory, people don’t cry because they feel sad.

Page 8: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

• Rather, people feel sad because they cry, and, likewise, they feel happy because they smile.

Page 9: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

• This theory suggests that different physiological states correspond to different experiences of emotion.

Page 10: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

The Cannon-Bard Theory

• The physiologist Walter Cannon disagreed with the James-Lange theory, posing three main arguments against it:

Page 11: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

1. People can experience physiological arousal without experiencing emotion, such as when they have been running. (The racing heart in this case is not an indication of fear.)

Page 12: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

2. Physiological reactions happen too slowly to cause experiences of emotion, which occur very rapidly. For example, when someone is in a dark alley alone, a sudden sound usually provokes an immediate experience of fear, while the physical “symptoms” of fear generally follow that feeling.

Page 13: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

3. People can experience very different emotions even when they have the same pattern of physiological arousal. For example, a person may have a racing heart and rapid breathing both when he is angry and when he is afraid.

Page 14: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

• Cannon proposed his own theory of emotion in the 1920s, which was extended by another physiologist, Philip Bard, in the 1930s.

Page 15: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

• The resulting Cannon-Bard theory states that the experience of emotion happens at the same time that physiological arousal happens.

• Neither one causes the other.

Page 16: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

• The brain gets a message that causes the experience of emotion at the same time that the autonomic nervous system gets a message that causes physiological arousal.

Page 17: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

Two-Factor Theory

• Also referred to as Cognitive Theory

• In the 1960s, Stanley Schachter and Jerome Singer proposed a different theory to explain emotion.

• They said that people’s experience of emotion depends on two factors: physiological arousal and the cognitive interpretation of that arousal.

Page 18: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

• Stanley Schachter's two-factor theory explains emotions in a more complete way that the other two theories mentioned above. 

• Two-factor theory demonstrates that emotion depends on the interaction between two factors, biology and cognition.

Page 19: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

• The idea behind this theory is that you first experience physiological arousal (biology) and then find a label in our mind (cognition) to explain the emotion.

Page 20: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

• For example, if you are feeling unwell, you may deduce the illness from the symptoms.

• This theory explains that your biological state will interpret emotions differently.

Page 21: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

• If I go for a jog and you lay in bed, my heart rate is more elevated.

Page 22: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

• Then somebody jumps out and scares us.

Page 23: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

• I will experience greater fear because my heart rate is already elevated and when I interpret what my body is feeling, it will feel like a worse fear.

Page 24: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

• The same goes for feelings of love.

• If you want to experience more passionate feelings, tell your boyfriend/girlfriend how you feel just after you have worked out.

Page 25: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

James-Lange Theory

Perceivedstimulus

Bodyresponses

Experiencedemotion

Page 26: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

Cannon-Bard Theory

Perceivedstimulus

Bodyresponses

Experiencedemotion

Page 27: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

Two-Factor Theory

Cognitivearousal

Bodyarousal

Experiencedemotion

Page 28: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

Theories of Emotion

• James-Lange theory– Environmental stimuli bring on physiological

changes that we interpret as emotions

• Cannon-Bard theory– Environmental stimuli elicit emotions and

bodily responses simultaneously

• Cognitive theory– Environment gives us clues that help us

interpret physiological reaction

Page 29: Emotion Motivation and Emotion. Emotion is at the heart of who we are as people. It is a reflection of our mental state.

Theories of Emotion