Sum It Up
Sum It Up
Sum It Up
COGNITIVE PROCESSES
COGNITION
The mental activities associated with thought, decision making , language ,
problem solving and other higher mental processes.
Thinking : is a complex mental process involved in the manipulation of
information either stored or collected through the senses from environment.
BASIC UNITS OF THOUGHT
1.Concept
2. Prototypes
3. Images
4. Language
1.Concepts
• Are not based on precise set of attributes , do not have clear cut
boundaries.
• Eg . for fruit the most of people thinks of apple, mango, etc.
1. Logical concept :
• That can be clearly defined by a set of rules.
• That have a well defined set of characteristics
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• Eg. A triangle has 3 sides and 3 angles.
FORMING CONCEPTS
• Along with the generalization individual tries to sense out the differences
between the objects .
• Dogs run on four legs and cows also do the same at the same time cows
and dogs are different from each other.
4.ABSTRACT THINKING
• it is the ability to think about objects principles and ideas that are not
physically present it is related to symbolic thinking which uses the
substitution of a symbol for an object or idea.
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2.PROTOTYPES
• Phonemes
The basic speech sounds of a language.
• Morphemes
The smallest meaningful units in a language, such as syllables or words.
• Syntax
Rules for ordering words when forming sentences.
• Semantics
The study of meanings in language.
• Pragmatics
How actually we use speech in communicating and how context aids
transmission of meanings in utterness.
Theories of language development :
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1.Social learning theory
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• according to this one's perception of the world is molded by one’s language
according to this view people speak different language perceive words in
different ways.
2. Thought as a determinant of language.
REASONING
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• Specific to general
• The term refers to the reasoning that takes specific information and makes
a border generalization that is considered probable, allowing for fact that
the conclusion may not be accurate.
• It is based on the specific incidents you have experienced, observations
you have made or facts you know to be true or false
• it is often used in applications that involve prediction forecasting
behavior .
• Bottom up logic.
Deductive reasoning
• General to specific.
• It is a basic form of valid reasoning and is used to reach a logical true
conclusion.
• It starts out with a general statement and examines the possibilities to
reach a specific logical conclusion.
• deductive reasoning is a logical process in which a conclusion is based on
the concordance of multiple premises that are generally assumed to be
true
• Deductive reasoning has accurate conclusion .
PROBLEM SOLVING
• Must recognize that a problem exist and then figure out just what issues,
obstacles, and goals are involved.
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• Some cases, people mistakenly identify the wrong source of the problem,
which will make attempts to solve it inefficient or even useless.
2.Formulate potential solutions.
• Try potential solutions and evaluate them on the basis of the effects they
produce.
• In many situations it is difficult to know how effective potential solution will
be until it is implemented thus careful assessment of the effects of various
solutions is another key step in the problem solving process.
Types Of Problems
(a)Well defined Problem
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• The ways for solving them is also difficult .
• No specific solution.
• Not possible to draw immediate and absolute conclusions and solutions.
Barriers of effective problem solving
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• Based on applying solutions that were previously successful with other
problems similar in underlying structure.
d)HEURISTICS
• Rules of thumb!
• Mental shortcuts that generally works for solving problems.
• Not 100%guaranteed.
• Advantage of this is the time and cognitive load is reduced.
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• Many problems can be represented in a variety of ways such as verbally,
mathematically or spatially.
CULTURE,COGNITIVE STYLE &
PROBLEM SOLVING
• refers to the thinking that is required to solve problem which has only one
correct answer
• mind converges to correct solution.these are straight forward process that
focusing on figuring out the most effective answer to a problem.
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• Its characteristics include speed accuracy logic.
2. Divergent thinking
• This stage the thing are understand the problem and collects the fact and
materials considered necessary for finding new solutions.
• many times the problem cannot be solved even after days or weeks or
months concentrated efforts.
• Failing to solve the problem the thinker are turned away from it initiating
next stage.
2 Incubation
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4. Verification
• Heuristics are simple rules of thumb that people often use to form
judgments and make decisions; think of them as mental shortcuts.
• Heuristics can be very useful in reducing the time and mental effort it takes
to make most decisions and judgments; however, because they are
shortcuts, they don’t take into account all information and can thus lead to
errors.
Types of Heuristics
Availability Heuristics
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Representative heuristics
MODULE 2
MEMORY
Memory
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ENCODING
That process by which information is converted into inform that can be entered in
to memory.
STORAGE
The process through which information is retained in memory.
RETRIEVAL
The process through information stored in memory located. recovery of stored
information
ATKINSON -SHIFFRIN MODEL (1968)
(Information information processing approach or stage model or modal model.)
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this is the memory system use. When looking up a phone number and dial
it
Third memory system is long term memory allows us to retain vast amount
of information for a very long periods of time.
• it is this memory system that permits you to remember events that
happened a few hours ago yesterday last month or many years passed.
• Long term memory allows to remember factual information.
• Atkinson and shifting proposed to that this involves operation of active
control process that act as filters, determining which information will be
retained.
• Information in sensory memory Enters short term memory when it
becomes the focus of our attention whereas sensory impressions that do
not engage attention fades.
• Information from sensory memory enters short term memory through
maintenance rehearsal.(merely repeating info. Silently to ourselves)
• Information in short term memory enters long term storage through
elaborative rehearsal.(think about its meaning and relate to it other
information already stored)
SENSORY MEMEORY
• Preserves information in its original sensory form for a brief time usually
only a fraction of a second.
• allows the sensation of visual pattern sound or touch for a brief moment
after the sensory stimulation is over.
It’s often thought of as the first stage of memory that involves registering a
tremendous amount of information about the information.
• The purpose of sensory memory is to retain information long enough for it
to be recognized.
• sensory memory haptic echoic iconic olfactory gustatory.
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•
•
SHORT TERM MEMORY
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• in the above case lecture of alphabets
Deepest level of processing (semantic level) • Information is analyzed in terms
of meaning.
• Example with think dogs not merely as animals with four legs and a tail
but also in terms of their relationship to cats.
ICONIC MEMEORY
Is part of the visual memory system also includes long term memory and
visual short term memory.
It’s a type of sensory memory that lasts very briefly before quickly fading.
WORKING MEMORY
• Working memory can be defined as a set off temporary memory stores that
activity manipulate and rehearse information which help us in the cognitive
process, reasoning and decision making.
• working memory is the work bench of consciousness, the place where
information we are using right now is held and processed.
• Baddley and Hitch replaced concept of STM with that of working memory.
Alan Baddley’s components of working memory
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•
•
b) Articulatory control process :or inner voice processes speech production
and rehearsal and store verbal information from the phonological store.
2. visual spatial sketchpad
CHUNKING
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patterns based upon information residing in long-term memory, or on the
basis of some other principle of organization.
• For example see “111222333444”; you do not usually learn it as “11 12 22
33 34 44”; but as “111 222 333
444” Or even as: “triple one, triple two, triple three, and triple four”. No
restrictions on the size of the chunks.
REHEARSAL
ELABORATIVE REHEARSAL
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•
•
• Elaborative rehearsal occurs when the information is considered and
organized in some fashion.
• The organization might include expanding the information to make it fi t
into a logical framework, linking it to another memory, turning it into an
image, or transforming it in some other way.
1.DECLARATIVE MEMORY
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•
•
is memory for factual information: names, faces, dates, and facts, such as
“a bike has two wheels.”
Declarative memory is sub divided into Semantic memory and Episodic
memory.
SEMANTIC MEMORY
• Memory for general knowledge and facts about the world, as well as memory
for the rules of logic that are used to deduce other facts.
• Because of semantic memory, we remember that Mumbai is on the Arabian
Sea, and that memoree is the incorrect spelling of memory.
• Thus, semantic memory is somewhat like a mental almanac of fact.
EPISODIC MEMORY
• Refers to memory for skills and habits, such as how to ride a bike or hit a
baseball. Information about things is stored in declarative memory;
information about how to do things is stored in procedural memory.
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•
•
FLASH BULB MEMORY
• The inability to recall information that one realizes one knows—a result of
the difficulty of retrieving information from long-term memory.
• This is the feeling that a memory is available, but not quite retrievable.
IMPLICIT MEMORY
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•
•
• Explicit memory refers to the deliberate, conscious recollection of facts and
past experiences. If someone asked you to recall everything you did
yesterday, this task would require explicit memory processes.
• There are two basic types of explicit memory tests: recall tests and
recognition tests.
PRIMING
MEASURING MEMORY
RECALL:
RECOGNITION
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•
•
• Subjects not only have cues to work with, they have the answers right in
front of them.
• In educational testing, essay questions and fill-in-the-blanks questions are
recall measures of retention. Multiple-choice, true-false, and matching
questions are recognition measures.
RELEARNING:
RETRIEVAL CUES
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ENCODING SPECIFICITY PRINCIPLE
• Refers to the memory that information entered into the memory in one
context than in others .
• In the experiment, participants were experienced deep-sea divers. They
learned a list of words either on the beach or beneath fifteen feet of water.
Then they tried to recall the words, either in the same environment in
which they had learned them or in the other setting. Results offered clear
support for the impact of context—in this case, physical setting. Words
learned on land were recalled much better in this location than under
water, and vice versa (Godden and Baddeley (1975).
STATE- DEPENDENT MEMORY
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SERIAL POSITION EFFECT
• The fact that when we memorize a list of words or other stimuli the words
at the beginning and at the end of the list remembered better than words
at the middle.
• it involves the existence of two memory system one that holds information
for few seconds and other stores in stores information for longer periods.
• We remember the last words because they are present in the working
memory.
• Remembering the words at the starting because they have already been
entered to the LTM.
• The recency effect is the tendency to remember the most recently
presented information best.
• The primacy effect refers to the tendency to recall information presented
at the start of a list better than information at the middle or end.
RECONSTRUCTIVE MEMORY
SOURCE MONITORING
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• source-monitoring error occurs when a memory derived from one source is
misattributed to another source.
Reality monitoring
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METAMEMORY
FORGETTING
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B)DECAY
C )INTERFERENCE
Proactive interference
• Interference in which material that was learned later disrupts the retrieval of
information that was learned earlier.
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• The best example to explain this theory is when we know a word, but we
cannot remember it, and it feels as if the word is stuck at the tip of the
tongue.
• The two main reasons for failure in memory retrieval are when there is a
failure in encoding due to which the information never made it to the
longterm memory in the first place.
• Also, there could be a retrieval failure where we cannot access the
information due to a lack of retrieval cues
E) MOTIVATED FORGETTING
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ELABORATION
MNEMONICS
• Acrostics are phrases (or poems) in which the first letter of each word
(or line) functions as a cue to help you recall information to be
remembered.
• Acronym—a word formed out of the first letters of a series of words..
• Acrostics and acronyms that individuals create for themselves can be
effective memory tools .
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Narrative Methods
• The method of loci involves taking an imaginary walk along a familiar path
where images of items to be remembered are associated with certain
locations.
MODULE 3
MOTIVATION
MOTIVATION
• Internal process that activate ,guide, and maintain behavior over time.
• The word motivation emerged from Latin word ‘MOVERE’ means to move/
arouses.
• Motivation involves goal-directed behavior.
• It refers to various psychological and physiological factors that causes us to
act in a specific way.
MODEL OF MOTIVATION
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• Drives activate a response (an action or series of actions) designed to
attain a goal (the “target” of motivated behavior).
• Reaching a goal that satisfies the need will end the chain of events.
• NEED : A lack of deficit of something ,reason for action
• DRIVE : Is a state of tension ,Internal energy that propels individual to act
in a certain direction.
• RESPONSE : It is the activity triggered to achieve something.
• GOAL : Satisfaction resulting from having attained desired need.
SOURCES OF MOTIVATION
DRIVES : drive is motivational tension, or arousal, that energizes behavior to fulfill
a need. Many basic drives, such as hunger, thirst, sleep, and sex, are related to
biological needs of the body or of the species as a whole. These are called primary
drives. Primary drives contrast with secondary drives in which behavior fulfills no
obvious biological need. In secondary drives, prior experience and learning bring
about needs.
INSTINCTS
Inborn patterns of behavior that are biologically determined rather than
learned.
It includes sympathy, self assertion , curiosity etc.
INCENTIVE
External rewards direct and energize behavior.
Goals that can either be objects or thought that we learn to value and
motivated to obtain.
Grades, money, praises, degrees etc.
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Incentive value The value of a goal above and beyond its ability to fill a
need.
THEORIES OF MOTIVATION
DRIVE THEORY
INCENTIVE THEORY
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• According to incentive theories, the source of motivation lies outside the
organism, in the environment. This means that incentive models don’t
operate according to the principle of Homeostasis , incentive theories
emphasize environmental factors and downplay the biological bases of
human motivation.
HIERARCHY OF NEEDS THEORY
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Self-actualization is a state of self-fulfillment in which people realize their
highest potentials in their own unique way.
AROUSAL THEORY
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• When our arousal state becomes too high, it needs to come down for
optimal functioning and vice versa.
• Too high a motivational arousal may affect performance negatively; it may
produce anxiety and irritability in the organism.
• Similarly too low an arousal may also have adverse effect e.g. performance
of a person suffering from depression.
• A consistent, well balanced, and leveled arousal is needed for the optimal
functioning e.g. in case of exams, athletics, interviews.
YERKS -DODSON LAW
• The suggestion that the level of arousal beyond which performance begins
to decline is a function of task difficulty.
• The Yerkes-Dodson Law suggests that there is a relationship between
performance and arousal.
• Increased arousal can help improve performance, but only up to a certain
point. At the point when arousal becomes excessive, performance
diminishes.
• The law was first described in 1908 by psychologist Robert yerkes and John
Dillingham Dodson.
• They discovered that mild electrical shocks could be used to motivate rats
to complete a maze, but when the electrical shocks became too strong, the
rats would scurry around in random directions to escape.
GOAL SETTING THEORY
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EVOLUTIONARY THEORY
COGNITIVE THEORIES
Theories that give importance to the cognitive processes of the individual in
explaining motivational process; thoughts, feelings, expectations, understanding
and evaluating all are important when explaining the motivation of the person.
BALANCE THEORY (Heider, 1958),
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motivated to change your attitude to make it dissimilar to that of the
disliked person.
COGNITIVE DISSONANCE THEORY
• suggests that we have an inner drive to hold all our attitudes and behavior
in harmony and avoid disharmony (or dissonance). This is known as the
principle of cognitive consistency.
• When there is an inconsistency between attitudes or behaviors
(dissonance), something must change to eliminate the dissonance.
• This theory proposed that people attempt to maintain consistency among
their beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors.
• According to this theory, a motivational state termed cognitive dissonance
is produced whenever beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors are inconsistent.
Cognitive dissonance is considered to be an aversive state that triggers
mechanisms to bring cognitions back into a consistent relationship with one
another. Much of the research on cognitive dissonance has centered
around what happens when attitudes and behaviors are inconsistent.
• This research suggests that behavior inconsistent with one’s beliefs—if
there is insufficient justification for the behavior—will often bring about
modification of those beliefs.
ATTRIBUTION THEORY
• The Attribution Theory explains how people use internal cues (their
perception of their environment) and external cues (observations of their
environment) to attribute causes to outcomes of different events that
occur around them.
• For example, if a man trips and falls he may attribute the cause of the
incident to be a rock in his path that he did not see, him tripping on his
shoelaces, or not seeing an uneven spot in pavement. He will look
immediately after the fall for external cues in his environment to explain
the incident. In a learning setting, a student may attribute failing a test to
not being smart enough, the test being too hard, or having “bad luck” with
test taking.
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• The first example involves external cues and the second involves internal
but it is important to note that in the Attribution Theory attributions do not
need to be accurate as they are the perceptions of each person individually.
EXPECTANCY THEORY
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THE MOTIVATION OF HUNGER AND EATING
• The brain, the digestive system, and hormones are all involved in
influencing hunger at the biological level.
THE BRAIN : areas in the hypothalamus play a key role in regulating hunger.
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ENIVRONMENTAL FACTORS REGULATING HUNGER
• Palatability: the better the food tastes, the more of it people consume.
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•
Quantity available: A powerful determinant of the amount eaten is the
amount available.
• Appearance of food.
• Cultural factors.
• Stress.
SEXUAL MOTIVATION
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•
• Achievement motivation is a significant variable in a competitive society.
• People with high motivation: Take and overcome challenges in order to
succeed rather than finding an easy ways of achieving success.
People with low motivation: Tends to avoid failure, finding easy way outs,
not desire to take difficult tasks.
Methods of measuring achievement motivation:
AGGRESSIVE MOTIVE
• The need for power refers to the need to hold positions of power and
authority and have control over other people and important resources.
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•
• They love to influence the thoughts and perceptions of other people. They
derive their sense of self-esteem by exercising power such people make
great leaders. For instance, most political leaders have a high need for
power.
• Generally, individuals who have high need for power and achievement
succeed in leadership positions.
This is because they have the drive to perform well and control other
people too.
AFFILIATION MOTIVE
• Motivation that comes from within, rather than from external rewards;
motivation based on personal enjoyment of a task or activity.
• occurs when we act without any obvious external rewards.
• We simply enjoy an activity or see it as an opportunity to explore, learn,
and actualize our potentials.
EXTRINSIC MOTIVATION
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•
• extrinsic motivation stems from external factors, such as pay, grades,
rewards, obligations, and approval.
• Most of the activities we think of as “work” are extrinsically rewarded .
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MODULE 4
EMOTION
EMOTION
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• The conscious experience of emotions indicate an evaluate aspect and
these contrasting emotions tend to occur simultaneously rather than
alternating back and forth.
PRIMARY EMOTIONS
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SECONDARY EMOTION
In this case anxiety would be the primary emotion while shame would be
the secondary emotion.
POSITIVE EMOTION
• Emotions are those feeling where there is lack of negativity such as no pain
or discomfort is left.
• Fredriksen identifies the 10 most common positive emotions such as joy,
gratitude, serenity, interest, hope, pride amusement, inspiration, how and
love,.
• Positive emotions lead to the cognitive flexibility hand a broad range of
behavioral tendencies.
EMOTION AND BRAIN
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• People who suffer damage to amygdala become blind to emotion.
PHYSIOLOGY AND EMOTION
• The fight or flight response refers to the physiological reaction that occurs
in the presence of something that is terrifying, either mentally or physically.
• The response is triggered by the release of hormones that prepare body to
either stay and deal with the threat or to run away to safety.
• It is explained in terms of ANS.
• The ANS has two division the sympathetic, activates the body at the time of
stress.
• the parasympathetic quits the body and conserves energy.
• the sympathetic branch. activates the body for emergency action of fighting
or feeling. it does this by arousing some bodily systems and inhibiting
others. Sugar is released into the bloodstream for quick energy, the
heartbeat faster to supply blood to the muscles, digestion is temporarily
slowed, blood flow in the skin is restricted to reduce, bleeding and so forth
such reactions improves the chances of surviving an emergency.
• the parasympathetic branch,. Reverses emotional arousal. it comes and
relaxes the body. After a period of high emotions the heart is slowed, the
pupil returns to normal size, blood pressure drops and so forth.
• In addition to restoring balance, the parasympathetic system helps build up
and conserve bodily energy it responds much more slowly. then
sympathetic does.
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SUDDEN DEATH
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• some facial expressions are shaped by learning and may be found only in
specific culture. Culture personal independence and a free expression of
individuals right and needs.
• While looking gender wise men and women differ in their private
experiences of emotion.
• women tend to more openly express sadness, fear, shame and guilt.
• Men more often express anger and hostility this is mainly because the
expression of emotion is strongly influenced by learning.
• the facial and bodily gestures of emotion speak a language all their own
and add to what person says.
• Kinesics is the study of communication through body movement postures,
gestures and facial expressions Informally we call it body language.
• Our face can produce some 20,000 different expressions which makes the
most expressive part of your body most of these are facial blends a mixture
of two or more expression.
• Facial expressions are boiled into three basic dimensions.
1. Pleasantness - unpleasantness
2. attention- rejection
3. Activation
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Chameleon effect :it refers to the fact we often unconsciously mimic the posters
mannerisms and facial expressions of other people as we interact with them. it
makes Stronger connection with others.
THEORIES OF EMOTION
1 JAMES LANG THEORY
• Walter cannon and later Philip Bart pointed out that physiological arousal
may occur without the experience of emotion.
• A theory of emotion suggesting that various emotion provoking events
simultaneously produce physiological arousal and subjective reaction
labeled as emotion.
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• this theory states that after we perceive an emotion producing stimulus,
Thalamus is the initial site of emotional response, next the thalamus send
signal to ANS thereby producing visceral response. At the same time
thalamus also communicate with cortex regarding the nature of emotion
experienced.
• Hence it is not necessary to define emotion to have unique physiological
patterns associated with them as long as the message sent to the cerebral
cortex differs according to the specific emotion.
• Most recent research has led some important modification of the theory,
the hypothalamus and the limbic system not the thalamus play a major role
in emotional experience.
3.OPPONENT PROCESS THEORY (1974)
• Richard Solomon and John Corbit suggested that and emotional reaction is
followed automatically by an opposite reaction.
• For example consider a surgeon who initially experiences very positive
emotions each time she successfully completes a lifesaving operation, later
however she experiences a sharp emotional let down. Overtime her
positive reaction decrease while the let down intensifies or occur sooner
after each medical procedure. The result she may gradually reduce the
number of operations she performs or at least become increasingly bored
with and indifferent to her work.
• In sum , opponent process theory suggest that a law of physics -Every
action there is an equal and opposite reaction – may apply in emotion s
well.
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COGNITIVE APPRAISAL THEORY OF EMOTIONS
• previous theories are mostly concerned with our physical responses but
cognitive factors also influences emotions.
• according to this psychologist developed various theories.
SCHACHTER’S TWO FACTOR THEORY (1962)
• Limitation :situations can’t hold emotions in just any way at anytime. And
in searching explain arousal subjects don’t limit themselves to the
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immediate situation. These emotions are not as pliable as the theory
suggests.
LAZARUS THEORY OF COGNITIVE APPRAISAL (1966)
Given by Richard Lazarus and his colleagues in 1966.
• The theory asserts that our emotions are determined by our appraisal of
the stimulus, but it suggests that immediate unconscious appraisal mediate
between the stimulus and the emotional response.
• Also distinguished between primary appraisal which seeks to establish the
significant meaning of an event and secondary appraisal which assesses the
ability of the individual to cope with the consequences of the event.
• Theory suggests that emotions are determined by our appraisal of the
stimuli which mediates between the stimulus and the emotional response
and is immediate and often unconscious.
• He argued that appraisal precedes cognitive labeling simultaneously
stimulating both the physiological arousal and the emotional experience
itself.
FACIAL FEEDBACK HYPOTHESIS
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EVOLUTIONARY THEORY OF EMOTION
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