Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Behavioral
response
Researchers believe that the experience
of emotions can be highly subjective.
Our unique experience of the emotions
is probably much more multi-
dimensional. Consider anger. Is all
anger the same? Your own experience
might range from mild annoyance to
blind rage. Plus, we don’t always
experience ‘pure’ forms of emotion.
Mixed emotions over different events
in our lives are common.
Many physical reactions we experience during an
emotion, which are controlled by sympathetic
nervous system, a branch of autonomic nervous
system. It controls involuntary body responses
such as blood flow and digestion.
The Amygdala is a tiny, almond shaped
structure that has been linked to motivational
states, as well as memory & emotion.
Researches proved that when people are shown
threatening images, the amygdala becomes
activated. Damage to amygdala impairs the fear
response.
This is the actual expression of
emotion. We spend a significant
amount of time interpreting the
emotional expressions of people
around. And our ability to accurately
understand these is tied to our
emotional intelligence.
Many expressions are universal, such as
smile indicates happiness or pleasure.
This was independently proposed by
psychologist William James and
physiologist Carl Lange, which suggests
that emotions occur as a result of
physiological reactions to events.
According to this theory, you see an
external stimulus that leads to a
physiological reaction. Suppose you see a
grizzly bear. You begin to tremble & ur
heart begins to race. You will interpret
your reactions & conclude that you are
frightened.
The theory was given by Walter
Cannon & Phillip Bard…
This theory states that we feel
emotions and experience physiological
reactions such as sweating, trembling
and muscle tension simultaneously.
More specifically, it is suggested that
emotions result when the thalamus
sends a message to the brain in
response to a stimulus, resulting in a
physiological reaction.
The Schachter-Singer Theory, given
by Stanley Schachter & Jerome E.
Singer., is an example of a cognitive
theory of emotion. This theory suggests
that the physiological arousal occurs
first, and then the individual must
identify the reason behind this arousal
in order to experience and label it as
an emotion.
His theory states that a thought must
come before any emotion or physiological
arousal. In other words, you must first
think about your situation before you can
experience an emotion.
Example: You are walking down in dark
late at night. You hear footsteps behind
you & u think it may be a stranger so
you begin to tremble, ur heart beats
faster & your breathing deepens and at
the same time u experience fear.
According to this
theory, emotion is the
experience of changes
in our facial muscles.
In other words, when
we smile, we then
experience pleasure,
or happiness. It is the
changes in our facial
muscles that cue our
brains & provide basis
of our emotions.
EXTERNAL
INTERNAL
Internal
changes
Brain waves