How does stress make us more vulnerable
to disease?
• Psychoneuroimmunologists study mind-body interactions,
including psychophysiological illnesses, such as
hypertension and some headaches.
• Stress diverts energy from the immune system, inhibiting
the activities of its B and T lymphocytes, macrophages, and
NK cells.
• Stress does not cause diseases such as AIDS and cancer,
but by altering our immune functioning it may make us
more vulnerable to them and influence their progression.
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Multiple-Choice Questions
Why are some of us more prone than others
to coronary heart disease?
• Coronary heart disease, North America’s number one cause
of death, has been linked with the reactive, anger-prone
Type A personality.
• Compared with relaxed, easygoing Type B personalities,
Type A people secrete more of the hormones that
accelerate the buildup of plaque on the heart’s artery
walls.
• Chronic stress also contributes to persistent inflammation,
which heightens the risk of clogged arteries and
depression.
What events provoke stress responses, and
how do we respond and adapt to stress?
• Stress is the process by which we appraise and respond to
stressors (catastrophic events, significant life changes, and
daily hassles) that challenge or threaten us.
• Walter Cannon viewed the stress response as a “fight-or-
flight” system.
• Later researchers identified an additional stress-response
system in which the adrenal glands secrete glucocorticoid
stress hormones.
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• Hans Selye proposed a general three-phrase (alarm-
resistance-exhaustion) general adaptation syndrome (GAS).
• Prolonged stress can damage neurons, hastening cell
death.
• Facing stress, women may have a tend-and-befriend
response; men may withdraw socially, turn to alcohol, or
become aggressive.
How do we communicate nonverbally? How
do the genders differ in this capacity?
• Much of our communication is through body movements,
facial expressions, and voice tones. Even seconds-long
filmed slices of behavior can reveal feelings.
• Women tend to read emotional cues more easily and to be
more empathic.
How are nonverbal expressions of emotion
understood within and across cultures?
• The meaning of gestures varies with culture, but facial
expressions, such as those of happiness and fear, are
common the world over.
• Cultures also differ in the amount of emotion they
express.
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How do our facial expressions influence our
feelings?
• Research on the facial feedback effect shows that our facial
expressions can trigger emotional feelings and signal our
body to respond accordingly.
• We also mimic others’ expressions, which helps us
empathize.
How do arousal and expressive behaviors
interact in emotion?
• Emotions are psychological responses of the whole
organism involving an interplay among physiological
arousal, expressive behaviors, and conscious experience.
• Theories of emotion generally address two major
questions: (1) Does physiological arousal come before,
after, or at the same time as emotional feelings, and
(2) how do cognition and feeling interact?
• The James-Lange theory maintains that emotional feelings
follow our body’s response to emotion-inducing stimuli.
• The Cannon-Bard theory proposes that our body responds
to emotion at the same time that we experience the
emotion (one does not cause the other).
To experience emotions, must we
consciously interpret and label them?
• The Schachter-Singer two-factor theory holds that our
emotions have two ingredients, physical arousal and a
cognitive label, and the cognitive labels we put on our
states of arousal are an essential ingredient of emotion.
• Lazarus agreed that many important emotions arise from
our interpretations or inferences.
• Zajonc and LeDoux, however, believe that some simple
emotional responses occur instantly, not only outside our
conscious awareness, but before any cognitive processing
occurs. This interplay between emotion and cognition
illustrates our dual-track mind.
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Multiple-Choice Questions
What is the link between emotional arousal
and the autonomic nervous system? How
does arousal affect performance?
• The arousal component of emotion is regulated by the
autonomic nervous system’s sympathetic (arousing) and
parasympathetic (calming) divisions.
• Performance peaks at lower levels of arousal for difficult
tasks, and at higher levels for easy or well-learned tasks.
Do different emotions activate different
physiological and brain-pattern responses?
• Emotions may be similarly arousing, but some subtle
physiological responses, such as facial muscle movements,
distinguish them.
• More meaningful differences have been found in activity
in some brain pathways and cortical areas and in the
hormone secretions associated with different emotions.
How effective are polygraphs in using body
states to detect lies?
• Polygraphs, which measure several physiological indicators
of emotion, are not accurate enough to justify widespread
use in business and law enforcement. The use of guilty
knowledge questions and new forms of technology may
produce better indications of lying.