Myers' Psychology Second Edition for AP Unit 8: Motivation, Emotion, and Stress
Module 37: Motivational Concepts
- Motivation is caused by both nature and nurture
- Nature pushes
- Nurture pulls
- Instinct theory focuses on genetically predisposed behaviors
- Drive reduction theory focuses on pulls and pushes
- Arousal theory focuses on stimulation
- Hierarchy of needs puts some wants over others
Instincts and Evolutionary Psychology
- Early psychologists were just naming instincts rather than explaining them
- Instincts are unlearned and are usually patterns
- Genes can cause some of our instincts
Drives and Incentives
- The drive reduction theory proposes that a need will create an aroused state. An organism will then try to diminish this state
- When a need increases, so does the drive
- Homeostasis is maintaining a steady internal state
- We are pushed to reduce drives
- We are pulled by incentives
- Incentives can be positive or negative environmental stimuli
- If there is both a need and an incentive we are strongly driven
Optimum Arousal
- Some motivated behaviors occur because we want to increase arousal
- People like this are often called "sensation seekers"
- We try to balance too much stimulation and not enough stimulation
- Yerkes Dodson law suggests that we search for the optimum level
A Hierarchy of Motives
- Some needs are more important than others
- Our needs can be explained through a pyramids
- At the base are physiological needs: food, water, and air
- Then comes safety
- Belongingness and love needs are next
- Then esteem needs
- Self actualization and self transcendence needs are at the top
- Each person's needs will differ based on environment and lifestyle
Module 38: Hunger Motivation
The Physiology of Hunger
- People have stomach contractions when they feel hungry
- Hunger can persist even if there are no stomach "pangs"
- Hunger comes because of multiple reasons
Body Chemistry and the Brain
- Body energy is stored in the blood sugar glucose
- If your blood sugar drops, your internal organs will send messages to your brain. Your brain will then relay these messages as hunger
- Several neural areas work to transfer the idea of hunger
- Blood vessels supply the hypothalamus
- Humans have appetite hormones
- If body weight rises, hunger decreases and energy expenditure increases
- If body weight decreases, hunger increases and energy expenditure decreases
- Weight tends to stay around a "set point"
- Other psychologists prefer to call it a "set range"
- Our basal metabolic rate measures how much energy we use for basic bodily functions
The Psychology of Hunger
Taste Preferences: Biology and Culture
- Environment can influence when and what we are hungry for
- Carbohydrates help boost serotonin which leads to a calming effect
- When stressed we prefer sweet foods
- Preferences can be genetic
- Conditioning an intensify or alter preferences
- Culture teaches that some foods are acceptable and others are not
- Environment can play a factor because certain ingredients can only be found in certain parts of the world
- We tend to avoid unfamiliar food but we can get bored of eating the same food over and over again
Situational Influences on Eating
- When we are in group settings we tend to amplify our natural behaviors. So at a party you are more likely to eat more
- Portion size influences out hunger
- Food variety influences our choices
Obesity and Weight Control
The Physiology of Obesity
- Fat is an ideal form of stored energy
- Obesity is sign of affluence and social status
- Obesity increases the risk of diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease, gallstones, arthritis, cancer, and shorter life expectancy
Set Point and Metabolism
- When a person becomes fat, they require less food to maintain their weight
- Fat has a lower metabolic rate than muscle
- When a person's weight drops below the set point, hunger increases and metabolism decreases
- Lean people burn more calories
The Genetic Factor
- A child's weight will resemble their biological parents
- Identical twins will be almost the same weight
The Food and Activity Factors
- Those with sleep loss are more vulnerable to obesity
- People with obese friends are more likely to be obese
- In today's society, we are eating more and moving less, which makes becoming obese much easier
Module 39: Sexual Motivation
The Physiology of Sex
The Sexual Response Cycle
- The sexual response cycle is made up of four stages: excitement, plateau, orgasm, and resolution
- In the excitement stage, genital areas are filled with blood.
- During the plateau phase, excitement peaks
- Breathing, pulse, and blood pressure will increase
- Muscle contractions occur during the orgasm
- During an orgasm, the uterus is put in a position to accept sperm
- The feeling of sexual release is the same in both sexes
- After an orgasm, the body will return to an unaroused state
- During the resolution phase, the male will enter the refractory period
- A male cannot orgasm again while in the refractory period
- Refractory periods can last from minutes to days
- A females refractory period is very short
Sexual Dysfunctions and Paraphilias
- Some people cannot complete the sexual response cycle
- Sexual dysfunctions consistently impair sexual arousal or functioning
- Some people lack sensual energy or arousability
- Men can have erectile disorders or premature ejaculation
- Women cna have pain or female orgasmic disorders, where they can never experience an orgasm
- Therapy and help with sexual dysfunctions
- Viagra can also help
- Paraphilias are people who experience sexual arousal in unusual ways
- Paraphilias include exhibitionism, fetishes, and unfortunately pedophilia
Hormones and Sexual Behavior
- Sex hormones direct he physical development of sex characteristics and activate sexual behavior
- Estrogens often peak during ovulation
- Male hormones are constant
- Both males and females have testosterone, but it is more prevalent in men
- Hormones levels can activate as a response to sexual stimulation
- Seculat stimulation increases during puberty
- As you get older, sex hormone levels decline
The Psychology of Sex
External Stimuli
- Men become aroused when they see, hear, or, read erotic material
- Women will also be aroused, but it is less noticeable
- With repeated exposure, the sexual drive can become limited
- Viewing these images can have a negative effect and people cna start to view their partners as less attractive
Imagined Stimuli
- The brain is also a sex organ
- Our imagination can influence sexual arousal and desire
- Both men and women have sexual fantasies
- Men often fantasize more
Module 40: Social Motivation Affiliation Needs
The Benefits of Belonging
- Social bonds boost survival chances
- Attachment can help a person be protected from threats
- Cooperation enhances survival
- More people hunting increases the chances of bringing back food
- Humans are social creatures
- Relationships can make unenjoyable things more bearable
- Social behaviors try to increase the feeling of belonging
- Humans build and maintain friendships/relationships
- Love is a natural painkiller
- Some people prefer to stay in an abusive relationship over being alone
- Insecure anxious attachment is constantly craving acceptance but afraid of rejection
- Insecure avoidant attachment is not wanting to get close to others
The Pain of Being Shut Out
- Social exclusion is called ostracism
- Ostracism is used as a form of punishment
- The feeling of loneliness can spread from one person to the next
- Cyberostracism is on the rise with the more frequent use of technology
- The pain we feel during ostracism is the same as physical pain
- Behaviors can be influenced by pain
Connecting and Social Networking
Mobile Networks and Social Media
- Humans connect through talking, texting, chatting, posting, gaming, and emailing
- Many people of all ages and from all countries use a cell phone to communicate
- Texting and emailing have become more popular
- We try to fit in on social media by having lots of friends
The Social Effects of Social Networking
- The internet is a social amplifier
- The internet greatly affects our relationships
Have Social Networking Sites Made Us More, Or Less, Socially Isolated?
- Lonely people spend lots of time online
- The internet has diversified social networks
- The internet can help us stay in touch with friends and family
- Using the internet can take up lots of time and attention
Does Electronic Communication Stimulate Healthy Self Disclosure?
- Humans tend to confide in others
- When communicating online, we do not care about the other person's reactions as much
- Humans are more likely to share things online than in person
- Online communication can deepen friendships
- However, face to face conversations are more meaningful
Do Social Networking Profiles and Posts Reflect People's Actual Personalities?
- Internet predators are real
- Most of the time real people and their real personalities are online
- Online profiles accurately reflect people
Does Social Networking Promote Narcissism?
- Narcissists are often highly active on social platforms
- They have superficial friends
- Their photos tend to be highly photoshopped
Module 41: Theories and Physiology of Emotion
- Emotions can act as motivation
- Emotions are a body's adaptive response
- Emotions can increase our chances of survival
Cognition and Emotion
- Emotions involve physiological arousal, expressive behaviors, and conscious experience
Historical Emotion Theories
James Lange Theory: Arousal Comes Before Emotion
- Common sense says "we cry because we are sad"
- James and Lange believed conscious awareness came before feeling
- Feelings follow bodily responses
Cannon Bard Theory: Arousal and Emotion Occur Simultaneously
- Cannon and Bard thought the opposite of James and Lange
- They said boyd responses are too similar and change too slowly to cause different emotions
- They believe body responses and emotions occur at the same time
- Those who have examined spinal cord injuries disagree with this theory
- Emotions do involve cognition
Cognition Can Define Emotion: Schachter and Singer
- Schachter and Singer believe emotional experiences require a conscious interpretation of arousal
- They believe physical reactions and thoughts create emotion
- Emotions need physical arousal and cognitive appraisal
- Arousal from one event can spill over into the next
- Arisual fuels emotion while cognition channels it
Cognition May Not Precede Emotion: Zajonc, LeDoux, and Lazarus
- We can have emotional responses that happen before or separate from the interpretation of an event
- Emotionally significant information tends to stick
- Complex emotions take a "high road" and go to a cortex to be analyzed and labeled
- Some emotions take the "low road" which is basically a shortcut to the cortex
- Sometimes our emotions happen so fast that we are unaware that they are occuring
- It is easier for our emotions to influence our thinking than our thinking to influence our emotions
- Some emotional responses do not require conscious thinking
- Personalized events can lead to a person making general assumptions about an overall experience
Embodied Emotion
Emotions and the Autonomic Nervous System
- The autonomic nervous system mobilizes your body for action
- When this happens the liver will pour extra sugar into the bloodstream
- Because we need more oxygen, heart rate, blood pressure, and breathing rates will increase
- Digestion slows down
- Pupils dilate
- Sweating occurs
- When a "crisis" passes, the parasympathetic division will calm your body and the opposite effects will occur
The Physiology of Emotions
- Fear, anger, and arousal are very similar in the physiological sense
- The insula is activated when we feel many emotions including lust, pride, and disgust
- Although some feelings are similar, they feel and look different from person to person
- Different areas of the brain can be involved with different emotions
Module 42: Expressed Emotion
Detecting Emotion in Others
- Humans give off nonverbal cues toward their emotions
- Humans are very capable of detecting nonverbal threats
- Experience can make us sensitive to particular emotions
- There is a difference between our real smile and our fake smile
- It is difficult to detect deceiving emotions
- Introverts are better at reading people's emotions
- It is difficult to determine emotions through online communication
Gender, Emotion, and Nonverbal Behavior
- Women are generally better at reading emotional cues
- Men describe things with simple emotions whereas women are more elaborate
- Women are more open to discuss feelings than men
- Anger tends to be in men more than women
- Women are more empathetic than men
- Women can experience emotions more deeply than men
Culture and Emotional Expression
- Gestures vary with culture
- Some signs, mainly ones made with the hands, that are appropriate in one country may be inappropriate in another
- Facial expressions are more universal
- Blind people often have the same facial expressions as anyone else
- Music also has universal sound of happy vs sad
- Similes are emotional and social
- How much emotion we express varies from country to country
The Effects of Facial Expressions
- Expressions can amplify and regulate emotions
- The facial feedback effect means that our muscle states can affect our emotions
- Emotions can affect our health
Module 43: Stress and Health
- Stress often strikes without warning
- Many students experience stress
- Stress can give you a headache or deprive you of sleep
Stress: Some Basic Concepts
- Stress the process of how we perceive and respond to certain events
- The stressor is the event that causes our emotions
- The emotional response is the stress reaction
- Stress comes more from how we react to events than the events themselves
- Stressors can have positive effects
- Extreme or prolonged stress can cause harm
Stressors--Things That Push Our Buttons
- There are three main types of stressors: catastrophes, significant life changes, and daily hassles
- All three types of stressors can be toxic
Catastrophes
- Catastrophes are unpredictable large scale events
- Catastrophes are usually perceived as threatening
- Emotional and physical damage can be significant
- People tend to relocate after a catastrophe, which can bring even more stress
Significant Life Changes
- Even happy events can feel stressful
- Many changes happen during young adulthood
- Young adults tend to have lots of stress
Daily Hassles
- Daily hassles include traffic, siblings, lines, friends, etc
- Some people can shrug off these hassles, but for others they just keep adding up
- Stress can take a toll on mental health and well being
- Stress can also come from an economic standpoint
- Prolonged stress can damage the cardiovascular system
The Stress Response System
- Stress hormones include epinephrine and norepinephrine
- Stress hormones can cause the fight or flight response
- The body's response to stress is very general and reacts to lots of different things
- The general adaptation syndrome states that the body's response to stress happens in three ways: alarm, resistance, exhaustion
- During the alarm phase the sympathetic nervous system is activated
- During resistance body temperature, blood pressure, and respiration are high
- Stress hormones begin to release in the bloodstream during resistance
- Exhaustion occurs when your body begins to run out. of energy, even if the stress has not passed
- You are vulnerable to illness and even death during exhaustion
- People often support others during times of stress. This is referred to as the tend-and-befriend response
- Men often isolate themselves while women join groups
Module 44: Stress and Illness
- Psychophysiological illnesses are "mind-body" illnesses. They are stress related and can range from hypertension to headaches
- Stress makes it harder for us to defeat diseases
- Psychoneuroimmunology studies how the mind and body work together to fight diseases and how the mind can affect the immune system
- White blood cells, or lymphocytes, search and destroy "invaders" in the immune system
- Macrophage identifies, pursues, and ingests harmful invaders
- Natural killer cells pursue disease cells
- Age, nutrition, genetics, body temperature and stress influence immune system activity
- If the immune system responds to strongly, it can attack non infected organs
- If it under reacts a person will continue to get very sick
- Women tend to have stronger immune systems than men
- Wounds heal slower in stressed people
- Stressed people are more vulnerable to colds
Stress and Susceptibility to Disease
Stress and AIDS
- AIDS stands for acquired immune deficiency syndrome
- AIDS is caused by HIV
- HIV stands for human immunodeficiency virus
- AIDS is exchanged through the exchange of bodily fluids, primarily blood and semen
- AIDS also kills slowly
- Stress cannot give people AIDS
- Stress can speed up the transition from and HIV infection to the AIDS disease
- People with AIDS and stress may experience a faster decline
- AIDS is more treatable, but preventing HIV is the safest option
Stress and Cancer
- Stress does not create cancer
- A healthy immune system can help beat cancer
- Stressed cells are more prone to developing cancer
- Cancer is also more likely to be in people who have depression, helplessness, or bereavement
Stress and Heart Disease
- Stress is more closely linked to coronary heart diseases
- Coronary heart disease are the clogging/closing of vessels that help the heart
- Smoking, obesity, high fat diet, physical inactivity, elevated cholesterol, can also factor into coronary heart disease
- Stress can lead to an increase in heart attack risk
- Type A people are more reactive, competitive, impatient, time conscious, aggressive, easily angered
- Type B people are more easy going and relaxed
- Type A people are more likely to have heart attacks
- Suppressing negative emotions can also increase the risk of heart attacks
- Those who are happier tend to live longer than those who have depression