CulturePsych C7
CulturePsych C7
CulturePsych C7
CULTURE AND
EMOTION
• Happiness
• Surprise
• Sadness
• Fright
• Disgust
• Contempt
• Anger (Ekman & Keltner, 1997).
Motivation | 175
to our survival and reproduction. Drive states differ from other
affective or emotional states in terms of the biological
functions they accomplish. All affective states are positive or
negative and serve to motivate approach or avoidance
behaviors (Zajonc, 1998) but drive states are unique. Drive
states generate behaviors that result in specific benefits for
the body. For example, hunger directs individuals to eat foods
that increase blood sugar levels in the body, while thirst causes
individuals to drink fluids that increase water levels in the body.
Sleep and sexual arousal are also drive states that generally
function to promote our survival and reproduction.
According to the drive theory of motivation, deviations from
our stable state creates physiological needs. These needs result
in psychological drive states that direct behavior to meet the
need and, ultimately, bring the system back to homeostasis –
back to balance. For example, if it’s been a while since you ate,
your blood sugar levels will drop below normal. This low blood
sugar will induce a physiological need and a corresponding
drive state (i.e., hunger) that will direct you to seek out and
consume food. Many homeostatic mechanisms, such as blood
circulation and immune responses, are automatic and
nonconscious. Some may require direction action.
Different drive states have different triggers. Most drive states
respond to both internal and external cues, but the
combinations of internal and external cues, and the specific
types of cues, differ between drives. Hunger, for example,
depends on internal, visceral signals as well as sensory signals,
such as the sight or smell of tasty food. Once we have engaged
in a behavior that successfully reduces a drive, we are more
likely to engage in that behavior whenever faced with that
drive in the future (Graham & Weiner, 1996). Drive states affect
many psychological processes, such as perception, attention,
emotion, and motivation, and influences the behaviors that
these processes generate.
176 | Motivation