PSY 1010 EXAM 4
31 A lie detector is used to monitor a personʼs:
Respiration
33 Fighting bacterial infections is to _____ as attacking viruses is to _____.
B lymphocytes; T lymphocytes
Cultural differences in emotion
Cultures differ in how much emotion they express and whether specific emotions are valued. Language also has a big part in expressing emotion
Ingroup bias
Favoring of our own group
31 In a crisis, the sympathetic nervous system of your ANS is highly adaptive because it prepares you for:
Fight or Flight
National Institute of Mental Health
Our mission is to transform the understanding and treatment of mental illnesses through basic and clinical research, paving the way for prevention, recovery, and cure."
Fundamental attribution error
Overestimating the influence of personal traits and underestimating the influence of the situation when explaining the behavior of others
Stereotypes
Overgeneralized beliefs about a group of people
Example #1: Foot-in-the-door
People who first agree to a small request will find it easier to agree to a larger one applies to both positive and negative behavior
Ingroup
People with whom we share a common identity
what is agression
Physical or verbal behavior intended to harm someone physically, emotionally, or socially
Cannon-Bard Theory
Physiological arousal and conscious awareness of an emotion happen simultaneously
36 ____________ is an unjustifiable, usually negative, attitude toward a group and its members.
Prejudice
Pessimistic expectations
Problematic coping strategy and failed outcome
What is stress?
Processes by which we appraise and respond to stressors
Health Psychology
Psychology's contribution to behavioral medicine
General Adaptation Syndrome (Phase 2)
RESISTANCE -designed to help body cope with stressor -temperature, blood pressure, & respiration rates are high -outpouring of stress hormones
Vivid examples
Remembering vivid examples that support an ingroup bias
What are self-conscious emotions?
- Appear during early childhood and are tied to one's sense of self - Shame, guilt, embarrassment, pride, envy
why do we have emotions?
- By motivating us to avoid or confront threats to our well-being and approach objects or activities that meet our needs. - By communicating our thoughts and needs to others.
What are basic emotions
- Present within the first year of life - Positive: happiness/joy - Negative: anger, disgust, sadness, fear - Neutral: interest and surprise
Non-verbal Emotional Expression
- body reactions - betrayal of emotion by the body
james lange theory
- physiological arousal comes before the experience of an emotion - Each emotion has a unique physiological response - Conscious experience of emotion comes from identifying our physiological response stimulus
three pillars of positive psychology
-positive well-being -positive character -communities -culture
31 Amelia has an ongoing disagreement with her husband about their 7-week-old infant. Amelia is certain that the baby can experience a wide variety of emotions. Her husband says young infants do not have that ability. Amelia is right, because according to Carroll Izard, people experience ________ basic emotions, most of which are present at infancy.
10
what diseases are pessimists more likely to develop?
2x as likely as optimists to develop heart disease
individualistic culture
A culture in which people believe that their primary responsibility is to themselves.
Optimistic expectations
A more effective response to stress and successful outcomes
What is an emotion?
A response of the whole organism, involving physiological arousal, expressive behaviors, and conscious experience.
why are stress and physical health associated?
The immune system requires energy to track down and fight infections. tress creates a competing energy need.
Discrimination
Treating members of that group in an unjustified way
Prejudicial attitudes
Unjustified negative emotions toward members of that group
Behavioral Medicine
Using behavioral techniques to treat physical and mental health conditions.
Media
Violence in TV, movies, video games, and even song lyrics provide social scripts that people can learn to follow
Cognitive dissonance theory
W e experience discomfort (dissonance) when we become aware that our attitudes (cognitions) don't align with our actions
31 Who suggested that very similar physiological reactions are associated with a variety of different emotions?
Walter Cannon
Example #2: Conformity
Willfully adjusting our behavior or thinking to coincide with a group standard. Reason for conforming - To avoid rejection or to gain approval (normative social influence) - To be accurate (informational social influence)
32 Makayla is working on a project for her psychology class that involves reading people's emotional cues. She needs a partner on the project, and she thinks her best choice would be a female. Which research finding supports this choice?
Women surpass men at reading people's emotional cues.
35 The relationship between attitudes and actions can BEST be described as:
a two-way street: actions influence attitudes and attitudes affect actions.
General Adaptation Syndrome (Phase 1)
alarm reaction immobilize
36 Research on the biology of aggression has clearly demonstrated that:
animals can be bred for aggressiveness.
Behavior feedback hypothesis
assumes that if we move our body as we would when experiencing some emotion we are likely to feel that emotion to some degree. ex) clenched fists, tense and rigid body will make you feel angry.
35 The ______________ indicates that, although we often cannot directly control all of our feelings, we can influence our feelings by changing our actions.
attitudes-follow-behavior principle
35 The mental process of inferring the causes of people's behavior is called _____.
attribution
example of non-verbal signals
body posture, gate, gestures, eye contact
35 This occurs MOST often when people are naturally analytical or involved in an issue.
central route persuasion
35 Computer ads seldom feature endorsements from Hollywood stars or great athletes. Instead, they offer detailed information for consumers to develop positive opinions about the products. This advertising strategy best illustrates:
central route persuasion.
What are Type A personalities?
characterized by competitiveness, impatience, and a tendency toward frustration and hostility, are more susceptible to heart disease
35 In the Milgram experiments, the level of obedience was highest when the teacher was _____ the experimenter and _____ the learner.
close to; far from
35 Professor Thomas wrote a very positive letter of recommendation for a student, despite his doubts about her competence. After writing the letter, he began to develop a more favorable attitude toward the student's abilities. Which theory best explains why?
cognitive dissonance theory
35 Festinger is to Zimbardo as _____ is to _____.
cognitive dissonance; role playing
Explicit prejudice
conscious and expressed overtly
collectivist cultures
cultures in which the self is regarded as embedded in relationships, and harmony with one's group is prized above individual goals and wishes
36 The fact that support for interracial dating has dramatically increased represents a(n) _____ in _____ prejudice
decrease; explicit
35 Your sister-in-law always has a smile on her face and a joke to tell. The moment she walks into your house you start smiling, even before she says something funny. Your attitude is a result of all of the following EXCEPT:
deindividuation
36 People may unconsciously harbor negative racial associations. This best illustrates the subtle nature of:
discrimination.
31 According to Carroll Izard, there are 10 basic emotions that humans experience and most of these are present during infancy. Which of the following is one of these basic emotions?
disgust
35 James usually does very well on tests, but he was up all night before his psychology midterm cleaning his flooded basement, and he therefore failed his exam. He tried to explain his situation to his teacher, but she thought that James' performance was caused by a tendency to avoid studying and she did not want to hear his excuse. The teacher incorrectly made a(n) _____ attribution about James' test performance.
dispositional
35 When behavior is ascribed to a person's relatively enduring tendency to think, feel, or act in a particular way, this is a(n) _____attribution.
dispositional
what is the problems with emotions
emotions do not have unique biological signatures
Example #2: Social loafing
endency for people in a group to exert less effort when pooling their efforts toward attaining a common goal
36 Which of the following is NOT a biological influence for aggression?
environmental influences
35 According to Milgram, the most fundamental lesson to be learned from his study of obedience is that:
even ordinary people, who are not usually hostile, can become agents of destruction.
General Adaptation Syndrome (Phase 3)
exhaustion -resources have been depleted, body is especially vulnerable to illness and infection
schacter-singer theory
experience requires a conscious interpretation of arousal (Two factor theory)
interpersonal relationships
experiences within close relationships have a profound influence on the emotions we feel, express, and interpret...for better and for worse.
32 Researchers have found that people experience cartoons as more amusing while holding a pen with their teeth than while holding it with their lips. This best illustrates the:
facial feedback effect.
36 Studies have revealed diminished activity in the _____ in the brains of violent criminals.
frontal lobes
what diseases are type A personalities prone to?
heart disease due to high blood pressure
32 People from different cultures are most likely to differ with respect to:
how they interpret hand gestures, for example, the "A-OK" sign.
33 Macrophages are cells that:
identify, pursue, and attack harmful invaders in the body.
36 Prejudice is often:
implicit and automatic.
31 Activation of the parasympathetic nervous system _____ salivation and _____ blood pressure.
increases; decreases
35 in _____ cultures, people are more likely to commit the fundamental attribution error, while in _____ cultures, they are less likely to commit the fundamental attribution error.
individualist; East Asian
Catastrophes
large-scale events that cause widespread damage to emotional and physical health
31 People with positive personalities are most likely to have greater activity in their:
left frontal lobe
31 Exuberant infants and alert, enthusiastic, and energetic adults are especially likely to show high levels of brain activity in the:
left frontal lobe.
36 Parents who discipline their children physically are often teaching aggression through the process of:
modeling
is all stress bad?
no, Moderately levels of stress can enhance immune system functioning
35 Conformity based on a desire for approval is called _____ social influence. Conformity based on the desire to be accurate is called _____ social influence.
normative; informational
32 A feigned smile:
often continues for more than 4 or 5 seconds.
35 In Asch's conformity experiments, researchers find that conformity to the group increases when all of the following occur EXCEPT:
one is made to feel insecure.
when encountering a challenge ... optimism
optimists feel capable of success
when encountering a challenge .... pessimism
pessimists expect things to go badly
36 The correlation between temperature and the likelihood that Major League Baseball batters will be hit by pitched balls is:
positive.
35 Students who were told that a young woman had been instructed to act in a very unfriendly way for the purposes of the experiment concluded that her behavior:
reflected her personal disposition.
Learning
reinforcement and social modeling
What are Type B personalities?
relaxed, noncompetitive, and more tolerant of others
35 Mood linkage refers to:
sharing the moods of those around us.
35 Social facilitation is MOST likely to occur in the performance of _____ tasks.
simple, well-practiced
Implication
successes and misfortunes are thought to be deserved
35 In Milgram's obedience experiments, "teachers" were LEAST likely to deliver the highest levels of shock when:
the "teachers" observed other participants refuse to obey the experimenter's orders.
35 In all of Milgram's obedience experiments, participants were deceived about:
the amount of shock the victim actually received.
32 When Lucy acts happy, she experiences increased feelings of cheerfulness. This best illustrates:
the behavior feedback effect.
35 Just hearing someone reading a neutral text in a sad voice creates "mood contagion" in listeners. This best illustrates:
the chameleon effect.
31 Although Gloria was almost hit by a bus, she is okay, and her parasympathetic system is responding accordingly. It is:
slowing her heart rate and activating her digestion.
36 Thomas enjoys watching violent pornography. When he goes out with a woman, he expects her to be submissive to his sexual demands; when he is turned down he becomes violent. Research done by social psychologists suggests that his beliefs are caused by _____, which are mental files for how to act.
social scripts
Culture
the enduring behaviors, ideas, attitudes, values, and traditions shared by a group of people and transmitted from one generation to the next - Culture-of-honor" tradition
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Our mission is to create a world where every person has the opportunity to live a healthy, productive life."
Example #4: Group polarization
The enhancement of an individuals' prevailing inclinations through discussion with other people of a group who have similar beliefs
neural influences
Aggression more likely to occur after frontal lobe damage
The spill over effect
Arousal from one event can spill over and influence an emotional response to another situation
problem-focused coping
Attempting to alleviate stress directly by changing the stressor or the way we interact with that stressor. (requires perceived sense of control)
emotion-focused coping
Attempting to reduce stress by attending to emotional needs related to our stress reaction. occurs when stress seems uncontrollable
persuasion strategies: Peripheral Route
Based on attention-grabbing emotional cues and leads to temporary challenges
persuasion strategies: Central Route
Based on evidence and systematic arguments and leads to enduring challenges
Belief in a just world
Belief that good is rewarded and evil is punished
Scapegoating
Blaming members of a minority group for a problem - Helps people feel secure by supporting a just world belief - Provides a target for feelings of fear and anger
31 Evidence that neck-level spinal cord injuries reduce the intensity with which people experience certain emotions most directly refutes the:
Cannon-Bard Theory
Genes
Certain genes predict aggressive behavior but weakly
36 Kaden, age 19, is a Black, female university sophomore. Research on how we categorize social information suggests that Kaden is most likely to perceive most:
Chinese people as looking pretty much alike.
The Stanford Prison Experiment
College students were randomly assigned to be "prisoners" or "guards" for a research study. Over the course of the study, students assumed the behavior of their roles.
31 The assistant chief of police has decided to use a variation of a polygraph test on a suspect and will assess the suspect's physiological responses to a series of very specific crime-scene details, known only to the police and the perpetrator of the crime. This is known as the:
Concealed Information Test.
what is considered a stressor?
Daily hassles and social stress
Zajonc and LeDoux Theory
Dual-processing theory: basic emotional responses can be processed... - Consciously via the cortex ("high road") - Unconsciously via the amygdala ("low road")
31 Cannon-Bard
Emotion-arousing stimuli trigger our bodily responses and simultaneous subjective experience.
31 James Lange
Emotions arise from our awareness of our specific bodily responses to emotion-arousing stimuli.
What is a stressor?
Events that are perceived as threatening or challenge
Group biases
Evolution prepares people to identify with a group
how are stress and physical health associated?
Experiencing chronically high levels of stress is associated with poor physical health outcomes
adaptation level phenomenon
Happiness is relative to our expectations, which are based on our prior experiences
31 Marshall was involved in a traumatic head injury that damaged the right frontal lobe of his brain. Based on the textbook's discussion, Marshall may experience which emotional change?
He may be less irritable and more affectionate.
how do you determine a stress response?
How people appraise the stressor, rather than the stressor itself, is what determines the stress response
what does chronic stress trigger?
Inflammation, in turn, increases risk of heart disease and depression
Unconscious patronization
Inflated praise and insufficient criticism when evaluating performance of members of a different group. based on lower expectations for members of that group
facial feedback hypothesis
Inspired by the James-Lange theory of emotion, Facial expressions trigger emotional feelings by signaling our body to respond accordingly
32 Some people are better at detecting other people's emotions. For example, shown a 2-second scene of an upset woman, people who are _____________ are better able to detect her emotion.
Introverted
31 As Theresa was riding her bicycle down a hill, she hit a large rock and started to lose her balance. She managed to come to a stop without falling, but noticed her heart was racing and she was shaking. After that, she realized she was frightened. Which theory of emotion best explains this sequence of events?
James-Lange theory
Aversive events
Leads to frustration, which leads to anger, which can lead to aggression (frustration-aggression principle)
35 Which of the following researchers proposed cognitive dissonance theory?
Leon Festinger
Example #5: Groupthink
Occurs when the desire for harmony in a decision-making group overrides a realistic appraisal of alternatives
31 Who says that we actually have many emotional reactions apart from, or even before, our interpretation of a situation
Robert Zajonc
Example #1: Social contagion
Tendency to automatically mimic the behavior (chameleon effect) and emotions (mood linkage). Helps us to understand and empathize with others
Biochemical influences
Testosterone influences the neural systems involved with aggression
role
a set of expectations defining how a person in the position ought to behave.
Example #3: Deindividuation
The loss of self-restraint occurring in situations that produce arousal and anonymity
Psychoneuro-immunology
The study of how psychological and neural processes affect the immune system
31 In response to various stressors, ________ increase(s) your heart rate and respiration.
The sympathetic nervous system
31 Nikolas is suspected of a crime and is asked to take a polygraph test. Although he is innocent, what are the chances that he will be falsely accused?
These tests err about one-third of the time.
35 Which of the following does NOT occur when people act as part of a group?
They underestimate their own contributions.
Outgroup
Those perceived as different or apart from our group
32 Which statement is TRUE of feigned smiles?
Those smiles are often switched on and off abruptly.
31 Emotion researchers have disagreed about whether emotional responses occur in the absence of cognitive processing. How would you characterize the approach of each of the following researchers: Zajonc, LeDoux, Lazarus, Schachter, and Singer?
Zajonc and LeDoux suggested that we experience some emotions without any conscious, cognitive appraisal. Lazarus, Schachter, and Singer emphasized importance of appraisal and cognitive labeling in our experience of emotion
36 Discrimination is a negative ___________.
behavior
36 Which of the following characteristics is NOT associated with anti-gay attitudes?
being female
relative deprivation principle
happiness is relative to others around us
Example #2: Roles
initially, our behavior in a new role often feels inauthentic. Over time, these behaviors become part of our identity.
types of perceived control
internal locus of control and external locus of control
31 Carroll Izard says that love:
is a mixture of joy and interest-excitement.
31 We sometimes interpret our arousal before experiencing a complex emotional reaction such as hatred. Such complex emotional reactions follow a neural pathway from:
the thalamus to the cerebral cortex to the amygdala.
35 Researchers asked homeowners for permission to install a large, poorly lettered sign in their front yards. Only 17 percent of the homeowners consented. Researchers then approached different homeowners and asked if they could post a small, neatly lettered sign. Nearly all agreed. Then, when asked two weeks later if they could post the large, ugly sign, 76 percent of this second group consented. The results of this experiment support:
the foot-in-the-door phenomenon.
36 When temperatures go up in summer, the rates of violent crimes increase. This is best explained in terms of:
the frustration-aggression principle.
35 Natasha thinks her professor's strict class attendance policy is an indication of her overly controlling personality, not a necessity given that the class meets only once a week. Her judgment best illustrates:
the fundamental attribution error.
32 The facial expressions associated with some emotions are generally:
the same throughout the world.
positive psychology
the scientific study of optimal human functioning; aims to discover and promote strengths and virtues that enable individuals and communities to thrive
31 Ava looks down while sitting at the top of the Ferris wheel. She immediately feels her heart start to pound. She is confused by this response until she remembers her last experience on a Ferris wheel. During that experience, the wind started to blow, the seats began to rock, and she thought she was going to die. Ava realizes her heart is pounding because she is afraid. Which theory BEST explains this sequence of events?
the two-factor theory
Significant life changes
transitions in one's personal life
Implicit prejudice
unconscious, automatic, expressed subtly
learned helplessness
uncontrollable stressful events, perceived lack of control, and generalized helpless behavior
36 Twenty Wallonians were arrested for nonviolent crimes, whereas 20 Pyreneans were arrested for violent crimes. The tendency to judge that more crimes were committed by Pyreneans than by Wallonians best illustrates the power of:
vivid cases.
36 Monoamine oxidase A (MAOA) is sometimes called the ________ gene.
warrior