Chapter 12 Psychology
Fixed action pattern
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Lie Detection
1. breathing 2. heart rate 3. blood pressure 4. GSR= galvanic skin response 5. pupil of eye 6. polygraph 7. guilty-knowledge test
Cannon was
1st to describe fight or flight response
Phsiological theories
JL and CB
Richard Soloman and John Corbit
Opponent-process theory
Characteristics of high achievers
Parents rewarded them for being individuals at an early age Worked much longer on a difficult problem Made higher grades in high school and college Willing to take moderate risks Persistant, work longer and harder to achieve goal
cognitive theories
SS and OP
emotion
a set of complex reactions to stimuli involving subjective feelings, physiological arousal, and observable behavior
drive
a state of tension produced by a need that motivates an organism toward a goal
emotional intelligence
ability to perceive, imagine, and understand emotions and use that information in decision making
incentive
an external stimulus, reinforcer, or reward that motivates behavior
motivation
an internal state that activates behavior and directs it toward a goal
James Averil
believed that many of our emotional reactions are the result of social expectation and consequences
Maslow's hierarchy of Needs (Abraham Maslow)
believed that only after lower levels of needs were met could individuals progress to the ultimate need of self- actualization
fundamental needs
biological drives that must be satisfied to maintain life (physiological/safety)
need
biological or psychological requirement of an organism
Need for achievement
closely related to ____ approval; important motivating factor
Paul Ekman
developed FACS- Facial Action Coding Systems
Carroll Izard
developed a coding system for assessing emotional states in people
Leonarde Keeler
developed polygraph
JW Arkinson
developed the expectancy-value theory- estimated likelihood of success of what the goal is worth to you
Harry Harlow
doubted the drive reduction theory and did mother love experiment contact comfort more important than needs - MONKEYS
Charles Darwin
emotions are innate not learned
intrinsic motivation
engaging in activities because they are personally rewarding or because they fulfill our beliefs and expectations
extrinsic motivation
engaging in activities that either reduce biological needs or help us obtain external incentives
cognitive theory
explain motivation by looking at forces inside and outside of us that energize us to move
Matina Horner
has study in 1960- study said women of above average intelligence are more likely to fear success (a later study in 80s showed equal fear between sexes)
instincts
innate tendencies that determine behavior
Flaw of Instinct Theory
instincts do not explain behavior simply label it
Social Motives
learned from interaction with others
Flaw of drive reduction theory
many types of behaviors not explained through deprivation
Fear of Failure
people choose easy tasks with assured success or impossible tasks with no chance of success
drive reduction theory
physiological needs drive an organism to act in either random or habitual ways
William James
proposed that humans have instincts such as cleanliness, parental love, curiosty, sociability, and sympathy
William McDougall
proposed that humans were motivatd by variety of instincts
Stanley Schacter
says obese people respond to external cues and normal weight people respond to internal cues
Fear of Success
some people are raised with the idea that being successful in all but a few careers is odd and unlikely so they fear and avoid success
Hyphenated theories
some people arrived at same conclusion at the same time; both received credit
James-Lange theory
something happens > body reacts > emotions produced
Cannon-Bard Theory
something happens > body reacts and emotions produced at same time
incentive theory
stresses the role of environment in motivating behavior
Opponent-process theory
sympathetic and parasympathetic systems act in concert to regulate and manipulate our emotions
glucostatic theory
the hypothalamus monitors the amount of glucose or read energy available in the blood
Deprivation
the interval of time after a need has been satisfied and before the need begins the cycle again
ventromedial hypothalamus
the part of the hypothalamus that can cause one to stop eating
lateral hypothalamus
the part of the hypothalamus that produces hunger signals
All emotions have 3 parts
the physical, the behavioral, and the cognitive
self-actualization needs
the pursuit of knowledge and beauty or whatever else is required for the realization of one's unique potential
homeostasis
the tendency of all organisms to correct imbalances and deviations from their normal state
psychological needs
the urge to belong and to give and receive love, and the urge to acquire esteem (belongingness and love/esteem needs)
Competency theory
to prove our competency, we choose moderately difficult tasks where both successes and failures may be instructive
Clark Hull
traced motivation back to basic psych needs when organism becomes deprived of need, it gets tense and agitated
David McCelland
used Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
uses series of pictures that require participants to make up story which are evaluated for carious themes which show beliefs, motives, and attitudes
Schacter-Singer theory
vitamin c experiment, act by example guy says he's dying then everyone else is
overjustification effect
when people are given more extrinsic motivation than necessary to perform a task, their intrinsic motivation declines