Physiological responses to emotions
[DOC File]Chapter 7: Emotions and Communication
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Physiological Activation. Expressive Behaviors. Conscious Experience The “Near Death” experience. Your heart races, your hands and legs shake… and then you feel emotions. Fear followed your body’s response. The James-Lange Theory-our experience of emotion is our awareness of our . physiological. responses to emotion-arousing stimuli.
Emotions and Types of Emotional Responses
A physiological approach to emotion, also known as the organismic view of emotions, suggests that when an event occurs, we respond physiologically, and only after that do we experience emotions. A perceptual approach to emotion suggests that subjective …
[DOC File]Chapter 13, Emotion
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Negative emotional states such as hatred, worry, fear, rage, and jealousy produce immediate physiological responses: a pounding heart, tense muscles, dryness of the mouth, cold sweat, butterflies in the stomach, and other physical manifestations. Longtime exposure to these symptoms have been associated with cardiac and digestive complications.
[DOC File]Theories of Emotion
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Physiological Similarities Among Specific Emotions 370. Do different emotions activate different physiological and brain pattern responses? negative emotions in the right hemisphere/ prefrontal cortex. left hem. Activated by positive emotions; rich supply of dopamine receptors
[DOC File]Chapter 7: Emotions and Communication
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emotions and voluntary observable actions. emotions and physiological responses. physiological responses and voluntary observable actions. Watson is famous for . measuring how much animals salivate when fed. training animals to salivate. training animals to salivate to something new. teaching a child to feel fear to something new.
[DOCX File]Chapter 13- Emotion
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B. By understanding emotions, we can define _____ as processes that are shaped by physiology, perceptions, language, and social experiences. 1. A physiological approach to emotion, also known as_____, suggests that when an event occurs, we respond physiologically, and only after that do we experience emotions.
[DOC File]Emotion
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Some accuracy to this theory, however, it does not explain subtle differences in emotions that have similar physiological responses – i.e. “butterflies” in the stomach could be anxiety or excitement; trembling body could be anger, but also a response to cold temperature; blood flow to the hands & feet increases in association with anger ...
[DOC File]Study Guide for AP Psychology Test Chapter 12- Emotion ...
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Most of us are good enough at reading nonverbal cues to decipher the emotions on a face or even an old silent film. (Especially good at detecting nonverbal threats) -Although male and female students do not differ dramatically in self-reported emotions or physiological responses while viewing emotional films, the women’s faces . showed
[DOC File]LESSON 1 - EMOTIONS
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To experience emotion is to be aware of our physiological responses to an emotion-arousing event. “we feel sorry because we cry . . . afraid because we tremble”? Cannon Bard Theory: The physiological arousal and the emotion are experienced simultaneously. Cerebral Cortex and Sympathetic N.S. get the information at the same time.
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