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Emotions: Expressed and Experienced. Which comes first the expression or the feeling? Do we know our own emotions?. LOL!. Laughter. Is contagious can provide relief from pain, alleviate stress and promote functioning of the immune system.
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Emotions: Expressed and Experienced Which comes first the expression or the feeling? Do we know our own emotions?
LOL! Laughter • Is contagious • can provide relief from pain, alleviate stress and promote functioning of the immune system. • Can be used to promote solidarity among people -- as well as for exclusionary purposes.
Physiology and Feeling? • We often take it as a given that we experience an emotion and then our bodies react to reflect that feeling. • But it can be bi-directional. • Hold the pencil in your teeth or with your lips and read comic strips
James-Lange theory: • We feel sad because we cry, angry because our blood pressure rises, afraid because we tremble • The emotional experience is the consequence of a specific physiological reaction. • Support: Hold the pencil in your teeth or with your lips and read comic strips
Cannon-Bard Theory • Stimulus simultaneously triggers activity in the ANS and emotional experience. • Blush and feel embarrassed at the same time
2 Factor Theory • Different emotions are merely different interpretations of a general pattern of bodily activity. • Your heart beats fast….so is it fear, anger, love, caffeine….
Love on a swinging bridge? • 1974 - Dutton and Aron • Experimental group = Young men crossing a long, narrow, suspension bridge that rocked & swayed 230 ft above a river. • Control group = Young men crossed a long, narrow, suspension bridge that rocked & swayed 230 ft above a river and “rested” for 10 minutes • Approached by an attractive female (researcher), asked to complete a survey and given her phone #. • Who called her more?
Love on a swinging bridge? • 13 out of 20 called in the experimental group, while only 7 out of 23 called from the control group. • Fear and attraction exchangeable? • Supports the 2 factor theory.
So which is correct? • Turns out that each theory has some support, but isn’t completely accurate. • We don’t just have general physiological response to emotion. -- certain combinations of physiological responses are related to certain emotions. • But we also aren’t perfectly sensitive to these combinations -- we misattribute our physiology. • The bodily reaction causes and is a consequence of the mentally feeling an emotion.
WOW! • Do we even know our own emotions? • Do we know other people’s emotions!?
demonstration • Try to accurately decode the motion being expressed here. • “I’m absolutely thrilled to be here” • “Gee thanks” • “Way to go dude” • “Real nice”
demonstration • Nervousness, surprise, disgust, anger, sadness, fear, and happiness have been found in studies to be the easiest emotions to detect. Whereas love, fear, desire, jealousy, pride, disappointment and relief are much more difficult to detect. • Gender differences? • What does this mean? • the role of empathy in understanding others’ emotional reactions.
http://www.kqed.org/quest/television/emotions-revealed • Are expressions universal? • The 6: anger, disgust, surprise, fear, happiness, sadness
Cultural Differences • While it seems universal to read the 6 major emotions; there are different expectations of how people will show them. • Awlad Ali Bedouins of Egypt’s western desert do not express feelings of loss or hurt in public; instead they show indifference or anger or assign blame. • Tahitian language lacks terms for sadness, longing and loneliness; instead they interpret these sensations as a type of sickness
Lie to Me • Our attempts to obey our culture’s display rules are sometimes betrayed by incomplete control of facial muscles 15
Deceptive Expression • Humans are generally not that good at detecting when others are lying • Studies look at accuracy based on profession (100% = perfect accuracy, 50% = guessing) 16
Deceptive Expression • Polygraph • measures physiological changes associated with stress • high false positive rate • Blood flow in brain • some brain areas are more active when people lie than when they tell the truth 17
The Emotional Brain • Temporal lobe syndrome • Amygdala • appraisal • bilateral amygdala damage • no effect on recognition of happiness, sadness, & surprise • trouble recognizing anger, disgust, & fear • Nucleus accumbens 19
The Emotional Brain • Amygdala • make a rapid appraisal (pink route) • why? • Cortex • make a slow, thorough appraisal (green route) • why? 20
The Emotional Brain • Emotional regulation • typically to turn negative into positive • may sometimes need to “cheer down” • Reappraisal • thinking can change feeling • shown photo of woman crying at funeral amygdala became active • asked to reappraise and imagine woman is at wedding cortex became active and then amygdala deactivated 21
Emotional Communication • Emotional expression • emotional states influence the way we talk (intonation, inflection, loudness, & duration) • listeners can infer a speaker’s emotional state with better-than-chance accuracy • can also infer emotional states from how someone walks and facial expressions • Affective forecasting • not too good at predicting our emotional reactions to future events 22
Communicative Expression • Universality hypothesis • cross-cultural research supports this • congenitally blind persons make same expressions as others • The cause and effect of expression • feelings cause emotional expressions (muscles) • facial-feedback hypothesis • people with trouble experiencing emotions have trouble recognizing the emotions of others 23
Communicative Expression • Deceptive expression • Display rules • intensification • deintensification • masking • neutralizing 24
What Is Emotion? • Multidimensional scaling • Dimension of arousal • Dimension of valence (feeling) 25
Pg 208 in Blink • Subjects look at cartoons while holding a pen between their lips or teeth • Teeth found the cartoon much funnier • Ekman, Friesen and Levenson