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Emotion, Stress, and Health

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A state of arousal involving facial and bodily changes, ... E.g., schadenfreude. Some cultures don't have words for emotions that seem universal to others. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Emotion, Stress, and Health


1
Emotion, Stress,and Health
chapter 13
2
Overview
chapter 13
  • Nature of emotion
  • Emotion and culture
  • Nature of stress
  • Stress and emotion
  • How to cope

3
Emotion
chapter 13
  • A state of arousal involving facial and bodily
    changes, brain activation, cognitive appraisals,
    subjective feelings, and tendencies toward
    action, all shaped by cultural rules

4
The body
chapter 13
  • Primary emotions
  • Emotions considered to be universal and
    biologically based, usually thought to include
    fear, anger, sadness, joy, surprise, disgust, and
    contempt
  • Secondary emotion
  • Emotions that develop with cognitive maturity and
    vary across individuals and cultures

5
Your turn
chapter 13
  • Which of the following is a primary emotion?
  • 1. Love
  • 2. Suspicion
  • 3. Joy
  • 4. Jealousy

6
Your turn
chapter 13
  • Which of the following is a primary emotion?
  • 1. Love
  • 2. Suspicion
  • 3. Joy
  • 4. Jealousy

7
Universal expressions of emotion
chapter 13
  • Facial expressions for primary emotions are
    universal.
  • Even members of remote cultures can recognize
    facial expressions in people who are foreign to
    them.
  • Facial feedback
  • Process by which the facial muscles send messages
    to the brain about the basic emotion being
    expressed

8
The brain and emotion
chapter 13
  • The amygdala
  • Responsible for assessing threat
  • Damage to the amygdala results in abnormality in
    processing fear.

9
The brain and emotion
chapter 13
  • Mirror neurons
  • A class of neurons, distributed throughout the
    brain, that fire when an animal sees or hears an
    action and carries out the same action on its own
  • Far more evolved and varied in humans than in
    other animals
  • Help us recognize others intentions

10
Hormones and emotion
chapter 13
  • When experiencing an intense emotion, two
    hormones are released.
  • Epinephrine
  • Norepinephrine
  • Results in increased alertness and arousal
  • At high levels, can create sensation of being out
    of control emotionally

11
The autonomic nervous system
chapter 13
12
How thoughts create emotions
chapter 13
  • Perceptions and attributions are involved in
    emotions.
  • How one reacts to an event depends on how he/she
    explains it.
  • For example, how one reacts to being ignored or
    winning the silver instead of the gold medal
  • Philosophy of life is also influential.

13
Culture and emotion
chapter 13
  • Culture determines what people feel angry, sad,
    lonely, happy, ashamed or disgusted about.
  • Some cultures have words for specific emotions
    unknown to other cultures..
  • E.g., schadenfreude
  • Some cultures dont have words for emotions that
    seem universal to others.
  • Tahitian and sadness
  • Differences in secondary emotions appear to be
    reflected in differences in languages.

14
Rules of emotional regulation
chapter 13
  • Display rules
  • When, where, and how emotions are to be expressed
    or when they should be squelched
  • Emotion work
  • Acting out an emotion we do not feel or trying to
    create the right emotion for the occasion
  • Body language
  • The nonverbal signals of body movement, posture,
    and gaze that people constantly express

15
Gender and emotion
chapter 13
  • In North America women. . .
  • smile more than men.
  • gaze at listeners more.
  • have more emotionally expressive faces.
  • use more expressive body movements.
  • touch others more.
  • acknowledge weakness and emotions more.
  • Compared to women, men only express anger to
    strangers more.

16
Factors influencing emotional expressiveness
chapter 13
  • Gender roles
  • Cultural norms
  • The specific situation

17
The physiology of stress
chapter 13
  • General Adaptation Syndrome
  • Alarm
  • Resistance
  • Exhaustion
  • Goal is to minimize wear and tear on system.

18
Your turn
chapter 13
  • During which phase of the General Adaptation
    Syndrome is a person most vulnerable to disease?
  • 1. Alarm
  • 2. Resistance
  • 3. Exhaustion

19
Your turn
chapter 13
  • During which phase of the General Adaptation
    Syndrome is a person most vulnerable to disease?
  • 1. Alarm
  • 2. Resistance
  • 3. Exhaustion

20
Current approaches
chapter 13
21
Stressors and the body
chapter 13
  • Work-related problems
  • Noise
  • Bereavement and loss
  • Poverty, powerlessness, and low status

22
Explanatory styles
chapter 13
  • Optimists
  • Take better care of themselves when sick
  • Cope better
  • Draw on friends in hard times

23
The sense of control
chapter 13
  • Locus of control
  • A general expectation about whether the results
    of your actions are under your own control
    (internal locus) or beyond your control (external
    locus)
  • Feelings of control can reduce or even eliminate
    the relationship between stressors and health.

24
Your turn
chapter 13
  • Suppose you have several difficult exams coming
    up soon. If your thought is Theres no way I
    can study enough to get an A in psychology, then
    what is your locus of control?
  • 1. Internal
  • 2. External

25
Your turn
chapter 13
  • Suppose you have several difficult exams coming
    up soon. If your thought is Theres no way I
    can study enough to get an A in psychology, then
    what is your locus of control?
  • 1. Internal
  • 2. External

26
Benefits of control
chapter 13
  • When exposed to cold viruses, those who are out
    of control are more likely to develop colds.
  • Low-income individuals with high levels of
    control report similar quality of life to
    high-income individuals.
  • Managers and executives have fewer illnesses.
  • African-Americans reporting more control have
    fewer problems with hypertension.
  • Nursing home residents with greater control are
    more alert, happier, and live longer.

27
Limits of control
chapter 13
  • Primary control an effort to modify reality by
    changing other people, the situation, or events
  • A fighting back philosophy
  • Western cultures
  • Secondary control an effort to accept reality by
    changing your own attitudes, goals, or emotions
  • A learn to live with it philosophy
  • Eastern cultures

28
Emotions and illness
chapter 13
  • Hostility and heart disease
  • Type A personality determined to achieve, sense
    of time urgency, irritable, quick to respond to
    threat or challenge, impatient with obstacles.
  • Type B personality calmer, less intense
  • Cynical or antagonistic hostility is a major risk
    factor for heart disease

29
Positive emotions
chapter 13
  • Longitudinal study of 180 Catholic nuns found
    that longevity was related to frequency of
    positive emotions
  • Happiness
  • Interest
  • Love
  • Hope
  • Etc.
  • Nuns whose life stories contained the most
    positive emotion words lived an average of nine
    years longer.

30
Emotional inhibition
chapter 13
  • A personality trait involving a tendency to deny
    feelings of anger, anxiety, or fear stressful
    situations cause heart rate and blood pressure to
    rise sharply
  • People with this trait are more likely to fall
    ill than people who can acknowledge feelings.

31
Letting grievances go
chapter 13
  • Confession divulging private thoughts and
    feelings that make you ashamed or depressed
  • Can also give up thoughts that produce grudges
    and replace them with different perspectives.
  • Forgiving thoughts

32
Cooling off
chapter 13
  • Relaxation training
  • Learning to alternately tense and relax muscles,
    lie or sit quietly, or meditate by clearing the
    mind
  • Lowers stress hormones, enhances immune function
  • Massage therapy
  • Exercise

33
Solving the problem
chapter 13
  • Emotion-focused and problem-focused coping
  • Effective cognitive coping methods
  • Reappraising the situation
  • Learning from the experience
  • Making social comparisons
  • Cultivating a sense of humor

34
Looking outward
chapter 13
  • Friends can help
  • People who have network of close connections live
    longer than those who do not.
  • After heart attack, those with no close contacts
    were twice as likely to die.
  • Relationships can also cause stress.
  • Giving support to others can be a valuable source
    of comfort.

35
When friends arent helpful
chapter 13
  • Many are stressed by the responsibility of caring
    for others.
  • In close relationships, the support person may
    also be the source of stress.
  • Married couples who argue in a hostile way have
    increased elevations of stress hormones and
    weakened immune systems.
  • Friends may be unsupportive or block your
    progress toward a goal.
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