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Motivation & Emotion
James Neill
Centre for Applied Psychology
University of Canberra
2017
Image source
Nature of emotion
2
Nature of
emotion:
Six perennial questions
Reading:
Reeve (2015)
Ch 12
(pp. 337-368)
3
Outline – Nature of emotion
Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 337-338)
 What is an emotion?
● Key questions
● Definition
● Emotion & motivation
 What causes an
emotion?
● Two-systems view
● Chicken-&-egg problem
● What ends an emotion?
 How many emotions?
● Biological perspective
● Cognitive perspective
● Reconciliation of #s
 What is an emotion?
● Key questions
● Definition
● Emotion & motivation
 What causes an
emotion?
● Two-systems view
● Chicken-&-egg problem
● What ends an emotion?
 How many emotions?
● Biological perspective
● Cognitive perspective
● Reconciliation of #s
 What good are emotions?
● Coping functions
● Social functions
● Why we have emotions
 Can we control our
emotions?
● Emotion regulation
strategies
 Difference between
emotion & mood?
● Everyday mood
● Positive affect
 What good are emotions?
● Coping functions
● Social functions
● Why we have emotions
 Can we control our
emotions?
● Emotion regulation
strategies
 Difference between
emotion & mood?
● Everyday mood
● Positive affect
4
Key questions
Based on Reeve (2015, p. 339)
6. What is the diff. between emotion & mood?
2. What causes an emotion?
4. What good are the emotions?
3. How many emotions are there?
1. What is an emotion?
5. Can we control our emotions?
5
More questions
5. How are the emotions of animals & humans
similar and how do they vary?
2. What are the consequences of emotions?
4. How and why did emotions evolve?
3. How can emotion be changed?
1. How can emotion be measured?
6
Feeling All the Feels:
Crash Course Psychology #25
Youtube (2:00 / 10:50 mins)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gAMbkJk6gnE
Youtube (2:00 / 10:50 mins)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gAMbkJk6gnE
7
What is an emotion?
Feelings
• Subjective experience
• Phenomenological awareness
• Cognitive interpretation
Bodily arousal
●
Bodily preparation for action
●
Physiological activiation
●
Motor responses
Emotion
Sense of purpose
•Impulse to action
•Goal-directed motivational state
•Functional aspect to coping
Significant
life event
Based on Reeve (2015, Figure 12.1 Four components of emotion, p. 340)
Social-expressive
•Social communication
•Facial expression
•Vocal expression
A distinct pattern of neural activity
8
Separation from a
loved one, failure on
an important task
Four components of sadness
Feelings
• Aversive
• Negative
• Feeling of distress
Bodily arousal
• Decreased heart rate
• Low energy level
Sadness
Sense of purpose
•Desire to take action to
overcome or reverse the
separation or failure.
Based on Reeve (2015, Figure 12.2 Four components of sadness, p. 342)
Social-expressive
•Inner eyebrows raises
•Corners of lips lowered
•Lower lip pouting and
trembling
Increased activation in medial
prefrontal cortex
9
Definition of emotion
Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 340)
“Emotions are … short-lived,
feeling-purposive-expressive-bodily
responses that help us adapt to the
opportunities and challenges we
face during important life events.”
10
Definition of emotion
Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 342)
“Emotions are … the
synchronised brain-based
systems that coordinate feeling,
bodily response, purpose, and
expression so as to ready the
individual to adapt successfully
to life circumstances.”
11
Definition of emotion
Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 342)
“Emotions are … short-lived
psychological-physiological
phenomena that represent
efficient modes of adaptation to
changing environmental
demands.”
- Levenson (1994, p. 123)
12
Relationship between
motivation & emotion
Based on Reeve (2015, p. 343)
Emotions are one type of motive which
energises and directs behaviour.
Emotion as motivation
Emotions serve as an ongoing “readout” to
indicate how well or how poorly personal
adaptation is going.
Emotion as readout
13
What causes an emotion?
Based on Reeve (2015, Figure 12.3, Causes of the emotion experience, p. 344)
Distinct
pattern of
neural
activity
Cognitive
processes
Biological
processes
Feelings
Sense of purpose
Bodily arousal
Social-expressive
Significant
life
event
14
Biological and cognitive
perspectives
Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 344-346)
Biology lies at the
causal core of
emotion
(e.g., neurotransmitters)
• Izard (1989)
- infants
• Ekman (1992)
- emotions happen to us
• Panksepp (1982, 1994)
- genetically-endowed
neural circuits
Cognitive activity is a
necessary
prerequisite to
emotion
• Lazarus (1984, 1991a, 1991b)
- appraisal needed
• Scherer (1994a, 1994b, 1997)
- specific appraisals
(good/bad, cope,
morality)
• Weiner (1986)
- attribution
15
Two-systems view (Buck, 1984)
Based on Reeve (2015, Figure 12.4, Two systems view of emotion, p. 345)
Social,
cultural
learning
history of the
individual
Cortical
structures
and pathways
Evaluative,
interpretive, &
conscious
evaluation of
the meaning &
personal
significance of
the stimulus
event
Evolutionary,
phylogenetic
history of the
species
Sub-cortical
structures
and
pathways
Instantaneous,
automatic, &
unconscious
reaction to
sensory
characteristics
of the stimulus
event
Significant
stimulus
event
Parallel,
interactive, &
coordinated
output to
activate and
regulate
emotion
Innate
system
Learned
system
16
Two-systems views
Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 344-345)
 Levenson (1994)
● the two systems influence one
another
 Panksepp (1994)
● some emotions are primarily from the
biological system (e.g., fear and
anger), whilst
● other emotions arise from experience,
modeling and culture (e.g., gratitude
and hope).
 Levenson (1994)
● the two systems influence one
another
 Panksepp (1994)
● some emotions are primarily from the
biological system (e.g., fear and
anger), whilst
● other emotions arise from experience,
modeling and culture (e.g., gratitude
and hope).
17
Feedback loop in emotion
Based on Reeve (2015, Figure 12.5 Feedback loop in emotion, p. 346)
Emotion is a chain of events that aggregate
into a complex feedback system.
Emotion is a chain of events that aggregate
into a complex feedback system.
Arousal
Preparation
for action
Feelings
Expressive
displays
Overt
behavioural
activity
Cognition Emotion
Significant
stimulus
event
Can
intervene
at any
point
Can
intervene
at any
point
18
How many emotions are there?
Based on Reeve (2009, pp. 308-312)
Biological
perspective
●
Small # (2 to 10) of
primary, universal
emotions
●
Emotion is a bi-
product of biology &
evolution.
●
Downplays secondary
or acquired
emotions.
Cognitive
perspective
•Many, varied emotions
which arise in response
to different meaning
structures
•Acknowledges
importance of the
primary emotions, but
stresses the complex
(secondary, acquired)
emotions
19
Reconciliation of the numbers issue
Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 350-351)
1. Emotion families
Each basic emotion represents a family of
emotions that revolve around a particular theme
(biologically rooted, but cognitively nuanced).
2. Basic emotions
Basic emotions each have a sub-cortical brain
circuit that is rooted in evolutionary adaptation to
major life tasks and that has automatic
connections with feelings, expressions, bodily
preparations, and motivational action tendencies.
20
Wheel of emotions
(Plutchik)
21
Basic emotions criteria
(Ekman)
Based on Reeve (2015, p. 351)
1. Distinct facial expression
2. Distinct pattern of physiology
3. Automatic (unlearned) appraisal
4. Distinct antecedent cause
5. Inescapable (inevitable) activiation
6. Presence in other primates
7. Rapid onset
8. Brief duration
9. Distinctive subjective experience (feeling state)
10. Distinctive cognition (thoughts, images, memories)
22
Basic emotion exclusion reasons
(Ekman)
Based on Reeve (2015, p. 351)
1. Experience-based derivative of a basic emotion
(e.g., anxiety is a derivative of fear)
2. Mood (e.g., irritation)
3. Attitudes (e.g., hatred)
4. Personality traits (e.g., hostile)
5. Disorders (e.g., depression)
6. Blends (e.g., romantic love blends interest, joy, and
the sex drive)
7. Aspect of emotion
(e.g., cause (homesickness) or consequence
(avoidance))
23
Basic emotions
Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 347-349)
Basic emotions
Fear Anger Disgust Sadness Interest Joy
Negative emotion theme
• Response to threat and harm
Positive emotion
theme
• Response to
involvement and
satisfaction
potential
of threat
and harm
fighting off
threat
and harm
rejecting
threat
and harm
after
threat
and
harm
motive
involve-
ment
satis-
faction
24
1. Non-basic emotions are experience-based
2. Many terms better describe:
a) Moods (e.g., irritation)
b) Attitudes (e.g., hatred)
c) Personality (e.g., hostile)
d) Disorders (e.g., depression).
3. Some terms are blends of emotions (e.g., love).
4. Many terms refer to specific aspects of an emotion
(e.g., homesickness)
Ekman's reasons why biological theories
focus on a small number of basic
emotions
Based on Reeve (2009, p. 336)
25
What good are the emotions?
Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 352-353)
Utility of
emotion
Coping functions Social functions
26
Functional views of emotional behaviour
Based on Reeve (2015, Table 12.2, p. 353)
F u n d a m e n t a l L i f e T a s k E m o t i o n C o p i n g F u n c t i o n
G o a l p r o g r e s s , a tt a in m e n t Jo y S o o t h e , p la y
S e p a r a t io n o r fa ilu r e S a d n e s s R e v e r s e t h e s e p a r a t io n o r fa ilu r e
I n te r fe r e n c e w it h g o a l p u r s u it s A n g e r O v e r c o m e b a r r ie r s a n d r e s t r ic t io n s
T h r e a t o r d a n g e r p r e s e n t F e a r P r o te c t , a v o id
S p o ile d o b je c t D is g u s t R e p u ls io n
N o v e lt y, n e e d - in v o lv e m e n t I n te r e s t E x p lo r e , t a k e in in fo r m a t io n
A c h ie v e m e n t P r id e A c q u ir e s k ills , p e r s is t
Ju d g in g a n o t h e r a s in fe r io r C o n te m p t M a in t a in t h e s o c ia l h ie r a r c h y
F e e lin g s o f in fe r io r it y S h a m e P r o te c t , r e s to r e t h e s e lf
B e h a v in g in a d e q u a te ly G u ilt R e c o n s id e r a n d c h a n g e b e h a v io r
27
Social functions of emotion
Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 354-356)
2. Influence how others interact with us.
4. Create, maintain, & dissolve relationships.
3. Invite, smooth, & facilitate social
interaction.
1. Communicate our feelings to others.
28
Why do we have emotion?
 Do emotions help us to adapt and
function?
 Or are they distracting and
dysfunctional?
 Both are true – emotion is a
masterpiece of evolutionary design
but it also provide us with excess
baggage
 How well emotions serve us depends
on our emotional self-regulation
 Do emotions help us to adapt and
function?
 Or are they distracting and
dysfunctional?
 Both are true – emotion is a
masterpiece of evolutionary design
but it also provide us with excess
baggage
 How well emotions serve us depends
on our emotional self-regulation
Based on Reeve (2015, p. 356)
29
Emotion regulation strategies
Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 357-361)
5. Suppression: down-regulating one or more of the four aspects
of emotion (bodily arousal, cognitive, purposive, expressive).
2. Situation modification: problem-focused coping, efforts to
establish control, and searching for social support.
4. Reappraisal: changing the way one thinks about the situation
to modify the emotional impact.
3. Attentional focus: redirecting attention within the situation.
1. Situation selection: taking action to make one emotional
experience more or less likely.
30
● Controlling emotions is a challenge given
their four aspects: feelings, arousal, purpose,
and expression.
● Emotions are largely reactions to life events,
so they are difficult to conjure without a
trigger.
● If emotions are biologically-caused, then we
may have little control.
● But if emotions are governed by cognition
then a good deal of emotional experience
could be voluntarily controlled.
Can we voluntarily control
our emotions?
Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 341-342)
31
Emotions and the brain
Video: (~2 mins)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xNY0AAUtH3g
32
What is an emotion?
(Ekman)
Video: (~7 mins)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gaZDLOAg_Po
33
Lie detection – Lie to me trailer
Video: (~2 mins)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVG5AwZph-s
34
What is the difference between
emotion & mood?
Based on Reeve (2015, p. 361)
Significant
life events
Specific
Short-lived
Ill-defined
Influence
cognition
Long-lived
Antecedents
Action-
Specificity
Time course
Criteria Emotions Moods
35
Everyday mood
Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 363-364)
Positive affect
•Pleasurable engagement
•Reward-driven,
appetitive motivational
system
•Approach behaviour
•Dopaminergic pathways
Negative affect
•Unpleasant engagement
•Punishment-driven,
aversive motivational
system
•Withdrawal behaviour
•Serotonergic &
noradrenergic pathways
Positive affect and negative affect are
independent ways of feeling.
36
Diurnal variation in
positive and negative affect
Clark, L. A., Watson, D., & Leeka,
J. (1989). Diurnal variation in the
positive affects. Motivation and
Emotion, 13(3), 205-234.
Figure 12.8 Levels of Positive Affect (PA) and Negative Affect (NA) as a function of
time of day in two studies
Figure 12.8 Levels of Positive Affect (PA) and Negative Affect (NA) as a function of
time of day in two studies
37
Positive affect
Based on Reeve (2015, p. 365)
Prosocial behaviour
Creativity
Decision-making efficiency
Sociability
Persistence in the face of failure
Benefits of feeling good
Everyday, low-level,
general state of feeling good.
38
 Emotions have 4 key components –
feeling, body, motivational, expressive
 Emotions arise from activation of neural circuits in
the sub-cortical brain
 From a biological POV, there is a small set of
core emotions; from a cognitive POV there are
many more emotions
 Emotions help us to cope, communicate, and
survive
 Emotions are often automatic, but we can learn to
self-regulate
 Emotion is short-lasting; mood is longer-lasting
Summary
39
Aspects of emotion (Ch 13)
Biological
Cognitive
Social and cultural
Next lecture
40
References
 Reeve, J. (2009). Understanding motivation
and emotion (5th ed.). Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.
 Reeve, J. (2015). Understanding motivation
and emotion (6th ed.). Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.
 Reeve, J. (2009). Understanding motivation
and emotion (5th ed.). Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.
 Reeve, J. (2015). Understanding motivation
and emotion (6th ed.). Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.
Note: Image credits are in the slide notes
41
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 This presentation was made using
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Nature of emotion

  • 1. 1 Motivation & Emotion James Neill Centre for Applied Psychology University of Canberra 2017 Image source Nature of emotion
  • 2. 2 Nature of emotion: Six perennial questions Reading: Reeve (2015) Ch 12 (pp. 337-368)
  • 3. 3 Outline – Nature of emotion Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 337-338)  What is an emotion? ● Key questions ● Definition ● Emotion & motivation  What causes an emotion? ● Two-systems view ● Chicken-&-egg problem ● What ends an emotion?  How many emotions? ● Biological perspective ● Cognitive perspective ● Reconciliation of #s  What is an emotion? ● Key questions ● Definition ● Emotion & motivation  What causes an emotion? ● Two-systems view ● Chicken-&-egg problem ● What ends an emotion?  How many emotions? ● Biological perspective ● Cognitive perspective ● Reconciliation of #s  What good are emotions? ● Coping functions ● Social functions ● Why we have emotions  Can we control our emotions? ● Emotion regulation strategies  Difference between emotion & mood? ● Everyday mood ● Positive affect  What good are emotions? ● Coping functions ● Social functions ● Why we have emotions  Can we control our emotions? ● Emotion regulation strategies  Difference between emotion & mood? ● Everyday mood ● Positive affect
  • 4. 4 Key questions Based on Reeve (2015, p. 339) 6. What is the diff. between emotion & mood? 2. What causes an emotion? 4. What good are the emotions? 3. How many emotions are there? 1. What is an emotion? 5. Can we control our emotions?
  • 5. 5 More questions 5. How are the emotions of animals & humans similar and how do they vary? 2. What are the consequences of emotions? 4. How and why did emotions evolve? 3. How can emotion be changed? 1. How can emotion be measured?
  • 6. 6 Feeling All the Feels: Crash Course Psychology #25 Youtube (2:00 / 10:50 mins) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gAMbkJk6gnE Youtube (2:00 / 10:50 mins) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gAMbkJk6gnE
  • 7. 7 What is an emotion? Feelings • Subjective experience • Phenomenological awareness • Cognitive interpretation Bodily arousal ● Bodily preparation for action ● Physiological activiation ● Motor responses Emotion Sense of purpose •Impulse to action •Goal-directed motivational state •Functional aspect to coping Significant life event Based on Reeve (2015, Figure 12.1 Four components of emotion, p. 340) Social-expressive •Social communication •Facial expression •Vocal expression A distinct pattern of neural activity
  • 8. 8 Separation from a loved one, failure on an important task Four components of sadness Feelings • Aversive • Negative • Feeling of distress Bodily arousal • Decreased heart rate • Low energy level Sadness Sense of purpose •Desire to take action to overcome or reverse the separation or failure. Based on Reeve (2015, Figure 12.2 Four components of sadness, p. 342) Social-expressive •Inner eyebrows raises •Corners of lips lowered •Lower lip pouting and trembling Increased activation in medial prefrontal cortex
  • 9. 9 Definition of emotion Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 340) “Emotions are … short-lived, feeling-purposive-expressive-bodily responses that help us adapt to the opportunities and challenges we face during important life events.”
  • 10. 10 Definition of emotion Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 342) “Emotions are … the synchronised brain-based systems that coordinate feeling, bodily response, purpose, and expression so as to ready the individual to adapt successfully to life circumstances.”
  • 11. 11 Definition of emotion Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 342) “Emotions are … short-lived psychological-physiological phenomena that represent efficient modes of adaptation to changing environmental demands.” - Levenson (1994, p. 123)
  • 12. 12 Relationship between motivation & emotion Based on Reeve (2015, p. 343) Emotions are one type of motive which energises and directs behaviour. Emotion as motivation Emotions serve as an ongoing “readout” to indicate how well or how poorly personal adaptation is going. Emotion as readout
  • 13. 13 What causes an emotion? Based on Reeve (2015, Figure 12.3, Causes of the emotion experience, p. 344) Distinct pattern of neural activity Cognitive processes Biological processes Feelings Sense of purpose Bodily arousal Social-expressive Significant life event
  • 14. 14 Biological and cognitive perspectives Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 344-346) Biology lies at the causal core of emotion (e.g., neurotransmitters) • Izard (1989) - infants • Ekman (1992) - emotions happen to us • Panksepp (1982, 1994) - genetically-endowed neural circuits Cognitive activity is a necessary prerequisite to emotion • Lazarus (1984, 1991a, 1991b) - appraisal needed • Scherer (1994a, 1994b, 1997) - specific appraisals (good/bad, cope, morality) • Weiner (1986) - attribution
  • 15. 15 Two-systems view (Buck, 1984) Based on Reeve (2015, Figure 12.4, Two systems view of emotion, p. 345) Social, cultural learning history of the individual Cortical structures and pathways Evaluative, interpretive, & conscious evaluation of the meaning & personal significance of the stimulus event Evolutionary, phylogenetic history of the species Sub-cortical structures and pathways Instantaneous, automatic, & unconscious reaction to sensory characteristics of the stimulus event Significant stimulus event Parallel, interactive, & coordinated output to activate and regulate emotion Innate system Learned system
  • 16. 16 Two-systems views Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 344-345)  Levenson (1994) ● the two systems influence one another  Panksepp (1994) ● some emotions are primarily from the biological system (e.g., fear and anger), whilst ● other emotions arise from experience, modeling and culture (e.g., gratitude and hope).  Levenson (1994) ● the two systems influence one another  Panksepp (1994) ● some emotions are primarily from the biological system (e.g., fear and anger), whilst ● other emotions arise from experience, modeling and culture (e.g., gratitude and hope).
  • 17. 17 Feedback loop in emotion Based on Reeve (2015, Figure 12.5 Feedback loop in emotion, p. 346) Emotion is a chain of events that aggregate into a complex feedback system. Emotion is a chain of events that aggregate into a complex feedback system. Arousal Preparation for action Feelings Expressive displays Overt behavioural activity Cognition Emotion Significant stimulus event Can intervene at any point Can intervene at any point
  • 18. 18 How many emotions are there? Based on Reeve (2009, pp. 308-312) Biological perspective ● Small # (2 to 10) of primary, universal emotions ● Emotion is a bi- product of biology & evolution. ● Downplays secondary or acquired emotions. Cognitive perspective •Many, varied emotions which arise in response to different meaning structures •Acknowledges importance of the primary emotions, but stresses the complex (secondary, acquired) emotions
  • 19. 19 Reconciliation of the numbers issue Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 350-351) 1. Emotion families Each basic emotion represents a family of emotions that revolve around a particular theme (biologically rooted, but cognitively nuanced). 2. Basic emotions Basic emotions each have a sub-cortical brain circuit that is rooted in evolutionary adaptation to major life tasks and that has automatic connections with feelings, expressions, bodily preparations, and motivational action tendencies.
  • 21. 21 Basic emotions criteria (Ekman) Based on Reeve (2015, p. 351) 1. Distinct facial expression 2. Distinct pattern of physiology 3. Automatic (unlearned) appraisal 4. Distinct antecedent cause 5. Inescapable (inevitable) activiation 6. Presence in other primates 7. Rapid onset 8. Brief duration 9. Distinctive subjective experience (feeling state) 10. Distinctive cognition (thoughts, images, memories)
  • 22. 22 Basic emotion exclusion reasons (Ekman) Based on Reeve (2015, p. 351) 1. Experience-based derivative of a basic emotion (e.g., anxiety is a derivative of fear) 2. Mood (e.g., irritation) 3. Attitudes (e.g., hatred) 4. Personality traits (e.g., hostile) 5. Disorders (e.g., depression) 6. Blends (e.g., romantic love blends interest, joy, and the sex drive) 7. Aspect of emotion (e.g., cause (homesickness) or consequence (avoidance))
  • 23. 23 Basic emotions Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 347-349) Basic emotions Fear Anger Disgust Sadness Interest Joy Negative emotion theme • Response to threat and harm Positive emotion theme • Response to involvement and satisfaction potential of threat and harm fighting off threat and harm rejecting threat and harm after threat and harm motive involve- ment satis- faction
  • 24. 24 1. Non-basic emotions are experience-based 2. Many terms better describe: a) Moods (e.g., irritation) b) Attitudes (e.g., hatred) c) Personality (e.g., hostile) d) Disorders (e.g., depression). 3. Some terms are blends of emotions (e.g., love). 4. Many terms refer to specific aspects of an emotion (e.g., homesickness) Ekman's reasons why biological theories focus on a small number of basic emotions Based on Reeve (2009, p. 336)
  • 25. 25 What good are the emotions? Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 352-353) Utility of emotion Coping functions Social functions
  • 26. 26 Functional views of emotional behaviour Based on Reeve (2015, Table 12.2, p. 353) F u n d a m e n t a l L i f e T a s k E m o t i o n C o p i n g F u n c t i o n G o a l p r o g r e s s , a tt a in m e n t Jo y S o o t h e , p la y S e p a r a t io n o r fa ilu r e S a d n e s s R e v e r s e t h e s e p a r a t io n o r fa ilu r e I n te r fe r e n c e w it h g o a l p u r s u it s A n g e r O v e r c o m e b a r r ie r s a n d r e s t r ic t io n s T h r e a t o r d a n g e r p r e s e n t F e a r P r o te c t , a v o id S p o ile d o b je c t D is g u s t R e p u ls io n N o v e lt y, n e e d - in v o lv e m e n t I n te r e s t E x p lo r e , t a k e in in fo r m a t io n A c h ie v e m e n t P r id e A c q u ir e s k ills , p e r s is t Ju d g in g a n o t h e r a s in fe r io r C o n te m p t M a in t a in t h e s o c ia l h ie r a r c h y F e e lin g s o f in fe r io r it y S h a m e P r o te c t , r e s to r e t h e s e lf B e h a v in g in a d e q u a te ly G u ilt R e c o n s id e r a n d c h a n g e b e h a v io r
  • 27. 27 Social functions of emotion Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 354-356) 2. Influence how others interact with us. 4. Create, maintain, & dissolve relationships. 3. Invite, smooth, & facilitate social interaction. 1. Communicate our feelings to others.
  • 28. 28 Why do we have emotion?  Do emotions help us to adapt and function?  Or are they distracting and dysfunctional?  Both are true – emotion is a masterpiece of evolutionary design but it also provide us with excess baggage  How well emotions serve us depends on our emotional self-regulation  Do emotions help us to adapt and function?  Or are they distracting and dysfunctional?  Both are true – emotion is a masterpiece of evolutionary design but it also provide us with excess baggage  How well emotions serve us depends on our emotional self-regulation Based on Reeve (2015, p. 356)
  • 29. 29 Emotion regulation strategies Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 357-361) 5. Suppression: down-regulating one or more of the four aspects of emotion (bodily arousal, cognitive, purposive, expressive). 2. Situation modification: problem-focused coping, efforts to establish control, and searching for social support. 4. Reappraisal: changing the way one thinks about the situation to modify the emotional impact. 3. Attentional focus: redirecting attention within the situation. 1. Situation selection: taking action to make one emotional experience more or less likely.
  • 30. 30 ● Controlling emotions is a challenge given their four aspects: feelings, arousal, purpose, and expression. ● Emotions are largely reactions to life events, so they are difficult to conjure without a trigger. ● If emotions are biologically-caused, then we may have little control. ● But if emotions are governed by cognition then a good deal of emotional experience could be voluntarily controlled. Can we voluntarily control our emotions? Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 341-342)
  • 31. 31 Emotions and the brain Video: (~2 mins) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xNY0AAUtH3g
  • 32. 32 What is an emotion? (Ekman) Video: (~7 mins) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gaZDLOAg_Po
  • 33. 33 Lie detection – Lie to me trailer Video: (~2 mins) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVG5AwZph-s
  • 34. 34 What is the difference between emotion & mood? Based on Reeve (2015, p. 361) Significant life events Specific Short-lived Ill-defined Influence cognition Long-lived Antecedents Action- Specificity Time course Criteria Emotions Moods
  • 35. 35 Everyday mood Based on Reeve (2015, pp. 363-364) Positive affect •Pleasurable engagement •Reward-driven, appetitive motivational system •Approach behaviour •Dopaminergic pathways Negative affect •Unpleasant engagement •Punishment-driven, aversive motivational system •Withdrawal behaviour •Serotonergic & noradrenergic pathways Positive affect and negative affect are independent ways of feeling.
  • 36. 36 Diurnal variation in positive and negative affect Clark, L. A., Watson, D., & Leeka, J. (1989). Diurnal variation in the positive affects. Motivation and Emotion, 13(3), 205-234. Figure 12.8 Levels of Positive Affect (PA) and Negative Affect (NA) as a function of time of day in two studies Figure 12.8 Levels of Positive Affect (PA) and Negative Affect (NA) as a function of time of day in two studies
  • 37. 37 Positive affect Based on Reeve (2015, p. 365) Prosocial behaviour Creativity Decision-making efficiency Sociability Persistence in the face of failure Benefits of feeling good Everyday, low-level, general state of feeling good.
  • 38. 38  Emotions have 4 key components – feeling, body, motivational, expressive  Emotions arise from activation of neural circuits in the sub-cortical brain  From a biological POV, there is a small set of core emotions; from a cognitive POV there are many more emotions  Emotions help us to cope, communicate, and survive  Emotions are often automatic, but we can learn to self-regulate  Emotion is short-lasting; mood is longer-lasting Summary
  • 39. 39 Aspects of emotion (Ch 13) Biological Cognitive Social and cultural Next lecture
  • 40. 40 References  Reeve, J. (2009). Understanding motivation and emotion (5th ed.). Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.  Reeve, J. (2015). Understanding motivation and emotion (6th ed.). Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.  Reeve, J. (2009). Understanding motivation and emotion (5th ed.). Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.  Reeve, J. (2015). Understanding motivation and emotion (6th ed.). Hoboken, NJ: Wiley. Note: Image credits are in the slide notes
  • 41. 41 Open Office Impress  This presentation was made using Open Office Impress.  Free and open source software.  http://www.openoffice.org/product/impress.html  This presentation was made using Open Office Impress.  Free and open source software.  http://www.openoffice.org/product/impress.html

Notas do Editor

  1. Image source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:S%C3%A9pulcre_Arc-en-Barrois_111008_12.jpg Image by: Vassil, http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Vassil Image license: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en Acknowledgements: This lecture is based in part on instructor resource slides from Wiley. Wednesday 20 September, 2017, 13:30-15:30, 12B2 7124-6665 Motivation and Emotion / G Centre for Applied Psychology Faculty of Health University of Canberra Bruce, ACT 2601, Australia ph: +61 2 6201 2536 [email_address] http://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Motivation_and_emotion
  2. Image source: Image by: Image license:
  3. See also http://www.ted.com/playlists/1/how_does_my_brain_work.html
  4. Emotion as motivation – some researchers argue that emotions constitute the primary motivational system
  5. Also consider biological, psychoevolutionary, cognitive, developmental, psychoanalytical, social, sociological, cultural, and anthropological.
  6. Biology Izard – 3-week old infants smile in response to a high pitched voice and a 2-month-old expresses anger in response to pain (other authors) Ekman – emotions have rapid onsets, brief duration, and can occur automatically/involuntarily Panksepp – brain circuits provide the essential biological underpinnings for emotional experience e.g., brain-anger circuit, brain-fear circuit, brain-sadness circuit etc.: 1. Emotional states are often difficult to verbalise 2. Emotions can be induced via non-cognitive procedures e.g., electrical stimulation of brain or activity of facial musculature 3. Emotions occur in infants and non-human animals Cognition Cognitive activity is a necessary prerequisit to emotion Lazarus – Without an understanding of personal relevance of an event's potential impact on PWB, there is no reason to respond emotionally; Stimuli appraised as irrelevent do not elicit emotions Cognitive appraisal sets the stage for emotion Scherer – specific appraisals matter for emotion Weiner – Post-hoc attributions determine emotion
  7. In answer to question “What causes an emotion?” Buck: Two complementary systems, one innate, one learned
  8. Cognition vs. biology debate:A chicken-&-egg problem (Plutchik, 1985)
  9. Biological perspective: 8 research traditions in the biological study of emotion (see Table 12.1, Reeve (2015)) Cognitive perspective 9 research traditions in the cognitive study of emotion (see Figure 11.7, Reeve (2015))
  10. Similiar to criteria for intelligence?
  11. Similiar to criteria for intelligence?
  12. Similiar to criteria for intelligence?
  13. Image source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Information_icon4.svg License: Public domain Image source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Autoroute_icone.svg License: CC-BY-A 2.5 Author: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Doodledoo
  14. “establish our position vis-a-vis our environment” (Levenson, 1999) “equip us with specific, efficient responses that are tailored to problems of physical and social survival” (Keltner & Gross, 1999)
  15. Image source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Expression_of_the_Emotions_Figure_1.png Image author: Charles Bell License: Public domain
  16. Image source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Information_icon4.svg License: Public domain Image source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Autoroute_icone.svg License: CC-BY-A 2.5 Author: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Doodledoo
  17. Image source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Information_icon4.svg License: Public domain Image source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Autoroute_icone.svg License: CC-BY-A 2.5 Author: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Doodledoo