Motivation and Emotion
Motivation and Emotion
Anorexia Nervosa
Characterized by:
Extreme fear of being overweight
Dramatic weight loss
Distorted body image
Resistance to eating enough to
attain or maintain a healthy weight
Psychological Influences on Hunger
Afflicts adolescent and young adult
Sight and aroma of food women
Feelings of depression, anxiousness, or Affluent women are at a higher
boredom risk
Research evidence Can lead to female athlete triad
Direct relationship between
Bulimia Nervosa
weight gain and sitting around
Classroom demonstration - Super-Tasters Involves repeated cycles of binge eating
and purging
Avenues of purging
Vomiting
Strict dieting or fasting
Use of laxatives
Engaging in demanding and Plateau phase
prolonged exercise regimens Increase in vasocongestion, muscle
Triggers hormonal imbalances tension, heart rate, and blood
pressure
Origins of Eating Disorders
Testes elevate into a position for
Family dynamics ejaculation
Role of eating and dieting Orgasmic phase
Child abuse Orgasms:Involuntary muscle
Sociocultural climate contractions and release of sexual
Idealization of slimness tensions
Resolution
Hormones and Sexual Motivation Men enter a refractory period
Women can be re-aroused
Sex hormones:
Promote development of male and Teenagers who have had sex at least once
female sex organs
Regulate the menstrual cycle
Have activating effects
Affect sex drive and
promote sexual response
Example -Female animals
are receptive to males only
during estrus
Achievement Motivation
Expression of Emotions
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
Cards with pictures that are Expression of many emotions is universal
subject to various interpretations Smiling and baring the teeth
Helps assess achievement Facial expressions can occur in the
motivation absence of the emotion they are thought
Driven by performance or learning goals, to accompany
or both Voice, posture, and gestures
Performance goals are met provide clues
through extrinsic rewards
Satisfaction of learning goals
provides intrinsic rewards
Emotions are by-products of
automatic physiological and
Positive Psychology
behavioral responses
Deals with positive emotions Feelings can be changed by
Factors that contribute to happiness changing one’s behavior
Genetics Criticism
Impact of positive and negative Existence of distinct physiological
events response for each emotion
Socioeconomic circumstances The Cannon–Bard Theory of Emotion
Social relationships
Religion - Events can simultaneously trigger bodily
Attitudinal aspects responses and the experience of emotion
Optimism is a cognitive bias Emotions accompany bodily
responses
The Facial-Feedback Hypothesis - Criticism
Responses and emotions may not
Argues that facial expressions can affect
be stimulated simultaneously
one’s emotional state
Example -Pain may trigger arousal
Relationship between emotions
before any feelings of distress or
and facial expressions can work in
fear
the opposite direction
Links between facial feedback and The Theory of Cognitive Appraisal
emotion
Contraction of facial muscles - Proposed by Schachter and Singer
causes arousal, which boosts
emotional response
Theories of Emotions
Summary