Motivation and Emotion
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Transcript Motivation and Emotion
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Higher Level Cognition
Availability
Representativeness
Base Rate Fallacy
Gambler’s Fallacy
Anchoring
Confirmation Bias
Loss Avoidance
Status Quo Bias
Weighting Bias
Emotions
Evidence of universality
Biological Components
Theories
James-Lange
Two Factor
Current Issues
Separability of emotion and cognition
Emotional Intelligence
Motivation
Theorists -- why do we do what we do?
Freud: “To meet an unconscious need”
Hull: “To achieve homeostasis”
Skinner: “To get a reward”
Rotter: “Because she expected she would
get across and it was important to her to
get across”
Maslow: “To achieve self actualization”
Motivation
The effects of rewards
Lepper study & similar
Learned helplessness & attribution
Depressive style -- internal, stable, global
Stress
Types of stress:
acute and chronic physical threat,
psychological/social threat.
Stress activates the sympathetic "fight or
flight" response. Parasympathetic response
counteracts that.
Prolonged activation can cause damage:
heart disease, reproduction, growth,
digestion, immunity
Stress
Eustress
Methods of coping: control, humor, optimism,
social support, relaxation.
Individual differences in stress response:
Type A vs. B and hardiness,
Personality
Freud
Contributions, criticisms &
methods
Concepts
Psychic determinism
Id, Superego, Ego
Theory of psychosexual
stages of development
Methods of
assessment
Projective
Paper& pencil
Big Five factors
Personality
Defense mechanisms
Reaction Formation
Rationalization
Regression
Projection
Denial
Repression
The Power of the Situation
Errors and Biases
Conformity
Asch
Obedience
Fundamental Attribution Error
Just Word Bias
Milgram
Social Roles
Zimbardo
Social Reality & Positive
Social Psych
Cognitive Dissonance (Festinger & Carlsmith)
Perceiving Social Reality (Hastorf &Cantril)
Self-Fulfilling Prophesies (Rosenthal &
Jacobson)
Stereotyping & Prejudice
Sherif “Robber’s Cave”
Role of Errors & Biases
Social Reality & Positive
Social Psych
Methods of Persuasion
Reciprocity, Consistency, Social Proof,
Liking, Authority, Scarcity, Foot in the Door,
Door in the Face, “Even a penny will help”,
“Because . . .”
Helping & Liking
Abnormal
Three classic symptoms of mental
disorder: hallucinations, delusions and
affective disturbances
Some symptoms of mental disorder in
all of us, not cut & dry line betweenwhat
is abnormal and what is not.
Medical model vs. psychological model
Abnormal
DSM-IV
divides mental disorders into thematic
categories
diagnoses by using symptom profiles
instead of hard and fast criteria
requires distress or impairment in
functioning to be considered disorder
Important to remember that must cause
problems with functioning to be
considered a disorder.
Abnormal
Know gist of following disorders:
specific phobia
OCD
Depression
schizophrenia
Abnormality in Social Context
Definitions of abnormality
Distress, Maladaptiveness, Irrationality,
Unpredictability, Unconventionality,
Observer Discomfort
Effects of labels
Social and political uses of labels
Abnormality in Social Context
Cultural variations -- reasons
Personality / cognitive style
Definitions of mental illness
Acceptability of mental (as opposed to physical)
distress
Usage of medical and psychological services
Views of the origins and treatment of illness
Bias of Clinicians?
Problems with assessment tools?
Therapy
Behavioral Therapy
Flooding
Systematic Desensitization
Aversion Therapy
Social Learning Therapy
Operant Conditioning Therapy
Cognitive Therapy
Family Therapy
Therapy
Psychoanalytic Therapy
Freud
Jung – archetypes and collective unconscious
Projective Tests
Humanistic Therapy
Unconditional Positive Regard, Genuineness,
Non-Directive Guidance
Therapy
Biomedical Therapy
Drugs
Surgery
Electroconvulsive Therapy
Thank You for Being Such
Great Students!
Good Luck on the Final!!