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Emotions (Chapter 11)

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Title: Emotions (Chapter 11)


1
Emotions (Chapter 11)
  • Second Lecture Outline
  • Emotions and culture
  • Gender

2
Two Factor Theory of Emotion
  • Attributions are cognitive events that contribute
    to emotion
  • E.g., Splash through puddle in car Was it
    intentional? If so, anger is greater
  • Expectations are important as well
    Overachieving results in positive emotion, bronze
    vs. silver medal winners

EMOTION
Physiological arousal
Cognitive Interpretation
3
Field Experiment
  • Go on a blind date
  • Before going, eat three chocolate bars
  • They are full of caffeine and sugar Results in
    a highly alert, physically, and emotionally
    aroused state
  • You may also feel dizzy, ill
  • How will you interpret this state?
  • Is it attraction to the person you are with?
  • Do they make you sick and queasy?
  • Is it illness or anger?
  • You make cognitive attributions about
    physiological states such as these

4
Guilt and Shame
  • John goes home to see his parents for the break,
    but comes back to Wolfville on Friday to have fun
    with friends
  • Feels bad because parents were disappointed
    Views behavior as bad
  • John does not goes out with his friends because
    he feels so bad about himself
  • His parents have made him feel ashamed of his
    behavior Views self as bad
  • John resents parents for making him feel bad, for
    putting him in such a bind
  • You need a sense of self to feel guilt and shame
    as they are interpersonal emotions

5
What is the adaptive function of fear? How is it
displayed?
6
Primary Emotions
  • Primary emotions are common to all cultures
  • Fear, anger, sadness, joy, surprise, disgust
  • Evidence
  • Hard-wired, related to survival
  • Universal facial expressions
  • Common to all languages
  • Common elicitors across culture, e.g., burning
    building threat elicits fear, pie in face is
    funny, bad smells such as ammonia elicits disgust

7
Secondary emotions are influenced by culture
  • Guilt and shame
  • Culture gives us language for emotions
  • There are norms in how emotionally expressive
    people are within a culture
  • Display rules Non-verbal signals of emotion
  • E.g. What does it mean to extend first and last
    fingers of hand and wave in the air?
  • Body language, using hands to talk, what emotions
    do they indicate?

8
Emotion and gender
  • Men react more to provocation or interruption,
    physiological evidence supports this
  • Men and women may differ in their attributions of
    emotions or what they think is important
  • Power interruption during dinner vs. Superbowl
  • Women can read emotional signals better
  • Same sex expressions easier to read
  • Familiar people easier to read than strangers
  • How strong are the signals
  • Less powerful person becomes better at reading
    cues to fit in with more powerful person

9
More on Gender
  • Traditional gender roles express less emotion
  • Families vary in the degree of emotional
    expression, both positive and negative
  • Situational dependence, e.g., anger expression
    towards inferior but not superior individuals
  • Culture directs gender role behavior as well

10
How do you assess emotional experience?
  • Self Report/ Subjective
  • Behavioral observations (face, actions)
  • Physiological measurement arousal, hormones,
    polygraph
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