The science of emotional experience Flashcards

1
Q

Define the term “affect”

A

Any mental state involving an evaluative relationship with the environment (basically ‘feelings’)

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2
Q

What are two subcategories of affect?

A

Emotion and Mood

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3
Q

What are some key differences between emotion and mood?

A

Emotion caused by specific event or object, are ABOUT something vs Mood may be unaware of cause
Emotion shorter but more intensity vs Mood enduring but milder
Emotion rises and dissipates quickly vs Mood slowly

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4
Q

What are three commonly agreed features of emotion?
1. S____
2. A____
3. E____ r____

A
  1. Situation
  2. Appraisal (how you think about it, your interpretation of the situation)
  3. Emotional responses
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5
Q

Goals can be broadly defined as what?

A

Enduring or transient
Widely shared or idiosyncratic

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6
Q

Once an emotion is elicited there is a co-ordinated response comprising what 3 systems?
1. E____ - s____ experience, i____ m____ r____ that comes with experiencing emotion
2. B____ - emotions affect our o____ d____, may be because emotions often serve a c____ function
3. P____ - includes c____ n____ s____ and p____/a____ nervous system

A
  1. Experiential - subjective experience, internal mental representation that comes with experiencing emotion
  2. Behavioural - emotions affect our outward displays, may be because emotions often serve a communicative function
  3. Physiological - includes central nervous system and peripheral/autonomic nervous system
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7
Q

What is a disadvantage of self-report scales?

A

Requires self-awareness and understanding of emotion

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8
Q

What are two scientific ways of measuring facial expressions?

A
  1. Facial coding - Facial Action Coding System (FACS) assesses 44 different muscle movements
  2. Electromyography (EMG) - measuring electrical potential from facial muscles via placement of electrodes on face
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9
Q

What does pride and embarrassment look like in posture?

A

pride = expansive body posture
embarrassment = diminutive body posture

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10
Q

What are two ways vocal characteristics convey emotional states?

A
  1. Voice amplitude (loudness)
  2. Pitch (frequency)
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11
Q

What did Hernstein et al (2009) show about emotions and touch?

A

People can accurately decode emotions through touch alone
Participants were able to decode anger, fear, sadness, disgust, happiness, gratitude, sympathy and love
Patterns of touch were associated with different emotions

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12
Q

Which emotion has been hypothesised to be associated with the following brain regions?
1. Anterior cingulate cortex = s____
2. Insula = d____
3. Amygdala = f____
4. Orbital frontal cortex = a____

A
  1. sadness
  2. disgust
  3. fear
  4. anger
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13
Q

What are two main measures of blood and sweat?

A
  1. Cardiovascular (ie blood circulatory system) - measures such as heart rate, blood pressure, heart rate variability, cardiac output
  2. Electrodermal (ie sweat glands) - skin conductance, applied current, more sweat increases conductance
    - measure as SCL (level) or short-duration skin conductance responses (SCRs)
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