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Unit 7 AP Psych

Classical Theories of Motivation

  • 1.) Instinct Theory: (evolutionary perspective) – automatic behaviors in response to specific stimuli

  • 2.) Drive Reduction Theory: behavior is motivated by biological  needs

    • Needs: required for survival

    • Drives: impulse to act in a way that satisfies a need

    • Body seeks homeostasis: a balanced state where our needs are being met

  • 3.) Arousal Theory: when people seek an optimal level of excitement or arousal.  People with high arousal levels are drawn to risky/exciting behaviors C:

    • Yerkes Dodson Law of Arousal: Optimal level is middle ground – neither too bored or too stressed

  • 4.) Incentive Theory: You do a behavior to get the bonus/reward

  • 5.) Maslow’s Hierarchy of needs.  Ultimate goal = self actualization: reaching one’s ultimate potential.

Sexual Motivation

  • Sexual response cycle:

    • 1.) Excitement: genitals engorge with blood, increase heart rate

    • 2.)Plateau: heart rate and breathing continue to increase

    • 3.) Orgasm: genital contractions, ejaculation

    • 4.) Resolution/refractory period: body returns to unaroused, normal state.

  • Testosterone: Both females and males have it, but greater in males.  Stimulates male puberty development.

  • Estrogen: sex hormone secreted in greater amounts in females.  Female estrogen levels peak when ovulating

  • Psychological factors affect sexual motivation (i.e. attraction varies)

Hunger Motivation

  • hypothalamus is biologically involved in regulating our hunger - makes us feel hungry & full

  • Opposing parts

    • Lateral Hypothalamus: send signal to_eat_

    • Ventromedial Hypothalamus: sends single of satiety

  • Set point – body’s perfect weight based on our gender, build, and metabolic rate.

  • Appetite hormones

Hormone

Secreted By:

Function

Insulin

Pancreas

Controls blood sugar/glucose levels

Leptin

Fat cells

Causes the brain to increase metabolic rate and decrease hunger

Orexin

Lateral hypothalamus

hunger triggering hormone

Ghrelin

Empty stomach

Sends hunger signal to brain

PYY

Digestive track

Sends not hungry signals to brain

  • Psychology of hunger

    • Internal eaters: They are more likely to eat when they are truly biologically hungry

    • External eaters: eat based on external food cues.

    • Garcia Effect: learned taste aversions (classical conditioning) will make us not want certain foods even if we are hungry.

    • Culture : we typically prefer foods that are most familiar to us (connected to mere exposure effect)

Social Motivation

  • 1.) Humans have an innate need to belong, be accepted, and maintain social relationships (think of Maslow, Harlow)

  • 2.) Achievement Motivation: desire for significant accomplishment, mastery of skill, attainment of high standard

  • Intrinsic motivation: You do things for yourself; you enjoy it, it is rewarding

  • Extrinsic motivation: You do things for external reasons; outside rewards

  • Overjustification effect: when extrinsic motivations ruin the pure enjoyment of an activity.

  • Management techniques

    • Theory Y: Believe their employees are intrinsically motivated; hands off style

    • Theory X: Believe their employees are extrinsically motivated; they micromanage

Emotion

Theories of Emotion

  • Opponent Process Theory of Emotion: idea that the emotion that precedes an event is the opposite of the one that comes after it.

  • Catharsis: positive release of negative energy; venting

Culture & Emotion

  • Emotions and facial expressions seem to be universal across cultures

  • However, hand gestures vary from culture to culture

Happiness

  • Which variables correlate with happiness?

  • Which don’t?

  • Feel good Do good Phenomenon: more likely to help someone when we feel good

  • Relative Deprivation Theory: Our own happiness is relative to who we are comparing ourselves to.

  • Adaptation Level Theory: we adapt and adjust to new circumstances and return to our base level of happiness.

  • Are polygraphs effective?

Stress

  • Lack of perceived control over a problem exacerbates feeling of stress

  • Stress caused by catastrophes, significant life change, or daily hassles

  • SRRS: Social Readjustment Rating Scale

    • Measures stress by using life changing units

    • Major life changes increase stress score

    • Even positive changes (wedding, new job, baby) can cause significant stress

  • Hans Selye: General Adaptation Syndrome

    • 1.) Alarm reaction: heart rate zooms, sympathetic NS kicks in

    • 2.) Resistance: body stays on high alert. Hormones released to maintain ready state. Temperature, blood pressure, and breathing remain high

    • 3.) Exhaustion: body’s resources start to be depleted, immune system breaks down.  Vulnerable

  • Stress can cause which health conditions?

  • How can we help our stress levels?

  • Type A: people that have a competitive, driven, impatient, high achieving, often high stress personality

  • Type B: people who tend to be more easy going, relaxed, and experience less stress/anxiety

Individualistic

Collectivist

personal -emphasizedViews people as uniqueEncourage self-expressionEmphasizes competitiveness

Social-emphasizedView people as part of a groupDiscourage self-expressionEmphasis group harmony

Stages

Age

What happens

Oral stage

0-1 years old

Children derive pleasure from oral activities, including sucking and tasting.

Anal stage

2-3 years old

Children begin potty training

Phallic stage

3-6 years old

Boys are more attached to their mothers, girls to their fathers.

Latency stage

6 years old to puberty

Children spend more time with same sex peers

Genital stage

Beyond puberty

Individuals are attached to opposite sex peers.

  • Oedipus complex: during the Phallic stage.  A boy’s sexual desires towards his mother and feelings of jealousy/hatred towards the rival father. (girls experience a parallel Electra Complex).

  • Projection:  projection of the uncon to the con level (dream inter, TAT, ink blot, free association hypnosis)

Unit 7 AP Psych

Classical Theories of Motivation

  • 1.) Instinct Theory: (evolutionary perspective) – automatic behaviors in response to specific stimuli

  • 2.) Drive Reduction Theory: behavior is motivated by biological  needs

    • Needs: required for survival

    • Drives: impulse to act in a way that satisfies a need

    • Body seeks homeostasis: a balanced state where our needs are being met

  • 3.) Arousal Theory: when people seek an optimal level of excitement or arousal.  People with high arousal levels are drawn to risky/exciting behaviors C:

    • Yerkes Dodson Law of Arousal: Optimal level is middle ground – neither too bored or too stressed

  • 4.) Incentive Theory: You do a behavior to get the bonus/reward

  • 5.) Maslow’s Hierarchy of needs.  Ultimate goal = self actualization: reaching one’s ultimate potential.

Sexual Motivation

  • Sexual response cycle:

    • 1.) Excitement: genitals engorge with blood, increase heart rate

    • 2.)Plateau: heart rate and breathing continue to increase

    • 3.) Orgasm: genital contractions, ejaculation

    • 4.) Resolution/refractory period: body returns to unaroused, normal state.

  • Testosterone: Both females and males have it, but greater in males.  Stimulates male puberty development.

  • Estrogen: sex hormone secreted in greater amounts in females.  Female estrogen levels peak when ovulating

  • Psychological factors affect sexual motivation (i.e. attraction varies)

Hunger Motivation

  • hypothalamus is biologically involved in regulating our hunger - makes us feel hungry & full

  • Opposing parts

    • Lateral Hypothalamus: send signal to_eat_

    • Ventromedial Hypothalamus: sends single of satiety

  • Set point – body’s perfect weight based on our gender, build, and metabolic rate.

  • Appetite hormones

Hormone

Secreted By:

Function

Insulin

Pancreas

Controls blood sugar/glucose levels

Leptin

Fat cells

Causes the brain to increase metabolic rate and decrease hunger

Orexin

Lateral hypothalamus

hunger triggering hormone

Ghrelin

Empty stomach

Sends hunger signal to brain

PYY

Digestive track

Sends not hungry signals to brain

  • Psychology of hunger

    • Internal eaters: They are more likely to eat when they are truly biologically hungry

    • External eaters: eat based on external food cues.

    • Garcia Effect: learned taste aversions (classical conditioning) will make us not want certain foods even if we are hungry.

    • Culture : we typically prefer foods that are most familiar to us (connected to mere exposure effect)

Social Motivation

  • 1.) Humans have an innate need to belong, be accepted, and maintain social relationships (think of Maslow, Harlow)

  • 2.) Achievement Motivation: desire for significant accomplishment, mastery of skill, attainment of high standard

  • Intrinsic motivation: You do things for yourself; you enjoy it, it is rewarding

  • Extrinsic motivation: You do things for external reasons; outside rewards

  • Overjustification effect: when extrinsic motivations ruin the pure enjoyment of an activity.

  • Management techniques

    • Theory Y: Believe their employees are intrinsically motivated; hands off style

    • Theory X: Believe their employees are extrinsically motivated; they micromanage

Emotion

Theories of Emotion

  • Opponent Process Theory of Emotion: idea that the emotion that precedes an event is the opposite of the one that comes after it.

  • Catharsis: positive release of negative energy; venting

Culture & Emotion

  • Emotions and facial expressions seem to be universal across cultures

  • However, hand gestures vary from culture to culture

Happiness

  • Which variables correlate with happiness?

  • Which don’t?

  • Feel good Do good Phenomenon: more likely to help someone when we feel good

  • Relative Deprivation Theory: Our own happiness is relative to who we are comparing ourselves to.

  • Adaptation Level Theory: we adapt and adjust to new circumstances and return to our base level of happiness.

  • Are polygraphs effective?

Stress

  • Lack of perceived control over a problem exacerbates feeling of stress

  • Stress caused by catastrophes, significant life change, or daily hassles

  • SRRS: Social Readjustment Rating Scale

    • Measures stress by using life changing units

    • Major life changes increase stress score

    • Even positive changes (wedding, new job, baby) can cause significant stress

  • Hans Selye: General Adaptation Syndrome

    • 1.) Alarm reaction: heart rate zooms, sympathetic NS kicks in

    • 2.) Resistance: body stays on high alert. Hormones released to maintain ready state. Temperature, blood pressure, and breathing remain high

    • 3.) Exhaustion: body’s resources start to be depleted, immune system breaks down.  Vulnerable

  • Stress can cause which health conditions?

  • How can we help our stress levels?

  • Type A: people that have a competitive, driven, impatient, high achieving, often high stress personality

  • Type B: people who tend to be more easy going, relaxed, and experience less stress/anxiety

Individualistic

Collectivist

personal -emphasizedViews people as uniqueEncourage self-expressionEmphasizes competitiveness

Social-emphasizedView people as part of a groupDiscourage self-expressionEmphasis group harmony

Stages

Age

What happens

Oral stage

0-1 years old

Children derive pleasure from oral activities, including sucking and tasting.

Anal stage

2-3 years old

Children begin potty training

Phallic stage

3-6 years old

Boys are more attached to their mothers, girls to their fathers.

Latency stage

6 years old to puberty

Children spend more time with same sex peers

Genital stage

Beyond puberty

Individuals are attached to opposite sex peers.

  • Oedipus complex: during the Phallic stage.  A boy’s sexual desires towards his mother and feelings of jealousy/hatred towards the rival father. (girls experience a parallel Electra Complex).

  • Projection:  projection of the uncon to the con level (dream inter, TAT, ink blot, free association hypnosis)

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