Motivation and Emotion: Key Terms
Type B Personality
People who are classified as having Type B personality are better at relaxing without feeling guilty and working without becoming anxious or agitated. Some of the other characteristics include being more relaxed about time, and are not easily angered Ex. Mr. Muscat
Avoidance-Avoidance Conflict
The avoidance-avoidance conflict refers to making a decision between two equally undesirable choices. Ex: choosing between not having running water or not having electricity if you are tight on money
Approach-Approach Conflict
A conflict between two desired gratifications that may lead to some vacillation but rarely to great distress Ex. choosing between two good schools to go to college at
Cannon-Bard Theory
According to the Cannon-Bard Theory of emotion, emotions and bodily changes do not share a cause-and-effect relationship. Rather, they occur simultaneously, following a stimulating event. Ex. the physiological and emotional response to the bear happens at the same time
Defense Mechanism
Defense mechanisms operate at an unconscious level and help ward off unpleasant feelings Ex. repression of bad memories
Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation
Intrinsic: performing an action or behavior because you enjoy the activity itself Ex: reading for pleasure Extrinsic: performing an action or behavior because there is a reward to be gained Ex: reading for a competition that rewards the most book read with a vacation
Evolutionary Theory
It seeks to identify which human psychological traits are evolved adaptations, and explain emotion though these adaptations. Ex. the bear causes fear because evolutionary adaptations have taught us that a bear is a predator and potentially dangerous to our safety
Holmes-Rahe Social Readjustment Scale
Scale to determine how likely a person is to be stressed based on different life event. Ex. a person with a score of 150-300 have a 50% chance of a stress breakdown. A death of a loved one is 100 points on the scale.
Alarm Reaction
The initial stage in the body's response to stressful stimuli, characterized by adaptive physiological changes, such as increased hormonal activity and increased heart rate. Ex. heart racing after first seeing the bear
Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
Theory by Abraham Maslow about the human needs and motivation. Ex. A person needs to fulfill their deficit needs before reaching self-actualization
Instinct Theory
Theory that biological or genetic programming is the cause of motivation. This claim means that all humans have the same motivations due to our similar biological programming. Ex. motivated by hunger to eat, similar in all humans
Emotion
a complex psychological state that involves three distinct components: a subjective experience, a physiological response, and a behavioral or expressive response Ex. Joy, Surprise, Anger
Stress
a reaction to a stimulus that disturbs our physical or mental equilibrium Ex. trying to cope with the fact that you almost died to a bear
Physiological Motives
a state of physiological or psychological arousal which influences how we behave. Ex. a physiological arousal, such as hunger or thirst, motivates us to eat or get something to drink.
Bulimia Nervosa
an eating disorder characterized by episodes of binge eating—consuming a lot of food quickly—followed by compensatory behavior, most commonly vomiting or purging. Ex. Citizens on the capitol in the hunger games who over eat then force themselves to vomit to eat more
Anorexia Nervosa
an eating disorder characterized by refusal to stay at even the minimum body weight considered normal for the person's age and height. Ex. the Spanish model who did a photo-shoot to expose the dangers of the disorder
Exhaustion
can result in physical or mental breakdowns due to the body's response to the stressor. Ex. the body cannot handle the pent up stress of the bear attack and I get sick
Hans Selye - General Adaptation Syndrome
described three predictable stages the body uses to respond to stressors Ex. Stage 1 - alarm reaction Stage 2 - Resistance Stage 3 - Exhuastion
Affiliation Motive
describes a person's need to feel a sense of involvement and "belonging" within a social group Ex. developed by David McClelland; when a person goes along with the crowd even if they don't agree with them because they don't want to be alone
Drive Reduction Theory
deviations from homeostasis create physiological needs. These needs result in psychological drive states that direct behavior to meet the need and, ultimately, bring the system back to homeostasis. Ex. developed by Clark Hull; being cold creates a physiological need to be warm.
Opponent-Process Theory
emotional reactions to a stimulus are followed by opposite emotional reactions Ex. anxiety before skydiving, followed by relief when you land safely
Type A Personality
have characteristics like: they have a sense of time urgency, find it difficult to relax, and often become impatient and angry when they get delayed or are around other people whom they view as incompetent. Ex. many company CEOs
Approach-Avoidance Conflict
occur when there is one goal or event that has both positive and negative effects or characteristics that make the goal appealing and unappealing simultaneously. Ex. going out the night before a test may be fun, but hurts your chances of doing well
Resistance
opposing changing their behavior or refuse to discuss, remember, or think about presumably clinically relevant experiences. Ex. not discussing the bear attack with anyone
Incentive Theory
people are pulled toward behaviors that offer positive incentives and pushed away from behaviors associated with negative incentives Ex. driven to do well on a test for a monetary reward
Schachter-Singer two-factor Theory
r proposed that human emotions contain two factors or parts: physical arousal and a cognitive label, and that both of these elements must be present for you to experience an emotion. Ex. you have to be aroused by the appearance of the bear, and understand it cognitively, to experience fear
Need for Achievement
refers to an individual's desire for significant accomplishment, mastering of skills, control, or high standards Ex. working hard at a sport to win a champoinship
Multiple-Approach-Avoidance Conflict
result when a person is faced with a number of alternatives, each of which is in some way both positive and negative. Ex.
Arousal Theory
states that we seek an optimum level of excitement or arousal. Ex. after going bungee jumping, I would likely stay at home and relax for several days to balance out
James-Lange Theory
suggests emotions are a consequence of our physiological responses to external stimuli followed by identification of the emotion by examining the physical responses Ex. seeing a bear while shoveling causes a physiological response which is then later identified as fear
Yerkes-Dodson Law
suggests that there is a relationship between performance and arousal. Ex. being to casual or nervous about an event would lead to worse performance than being at the right level
Motivation
the process that initiates, guides, and maintains goal-oriented behaviors Ex. I'm doing the key terms during the snow day because I'm motivated to not have work over the weekend
Arousal
the state of being physiologically alert, awake, and attentive. Ex. shoveling the driveway when a bear suddenly appears would get me aroused
Drive
theory that attempts to define, analyze, or classify the psychological drives. Ex. Incentive Theory, Instinct Theory
Set Point
theory that states everyone's body has a genetically determined range of weight and temperature that their body will try to maintain to stay at optimal health. Ex. I have a mid set point, while natural long distance runners have a low set point
Overjustification Effect
when an expected external incentive such as money or prizes decreases a person's intrinsic motivation to perform a task Ex: not wanting to read anymore unless it is rewarded