Term
Emotion:
Definition?
Some emotions seem to be related to ________ |
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Definition
- is a state of arousal involving: physiological changes, cognitive processes, and cultural influences.
- evolutionary history
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Term
Emotions:
Primary?
Secondary?
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Definition
- emotions considered to be universal and biologically based
- emotions that develop within a culture and vary across individuals and cultures
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Term
Facial feedback:
Definition? |
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Definition
- the process by which facial muscles sends messages to the brain about teh basic emotion being expressed
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Term
Emotions help us to communicate _________ and ___________ to others. |
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Definition
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Term
Facial action coding system:
Definition?
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Definition
- a system used to carefully observe facial expressions
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Term
Polygraph machine:
What does it measure?
What does it detect?
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Definition
- used to measure emotional arousal of a person
- deteccts increased autonomic nervous system activity
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Term
Autonomic System
Sympathetic system: activates when?
Parasympathetic system: involved in what? |
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Definition
- activated dwhen a threat is perceived
- involved in calming the body when there is no risk of danger
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Term
Prefrontal Cortex
Where it is located?
What does the left side do?
What does the right side do?
What is this linked to? |
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Definition
- it is the most forward part of the prontal lobes of the brain
- the left side is involved in motivation
- right side is involved in withdrawl and escape
- linked to emotional regulation, modifying and controlling what we feel
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Term
Amygdala:
What is it?
What does it assess? |
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Definition
- brain structure involed in regulation of emotions, and the initial emotional response to sensory information
- assesses threats
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Term
Mirror neurons:
Definition?
What is it involved in? |
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Definition
- the brain cells that fre when a person observes others carrying out an action
- empathy, imitation, and reading emotions
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Term
Mood contagion:
Definition?
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Definition
- a mood spreading from one person to another
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Term
When experiencing intense emotions or under stress, what two hormones are released?
from where? |
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Definition
- epinephrine and norepinephrine
- from the adrenal glands
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Term
James-Lange: Body Reaction Theory:
What is it?
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Definition
Perceiving a stimulus causes autonomic arousal and other bodily actios that lead to experience of a specific emotion
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Term
Cannon-Bard: Central Neural Processes Theory:
What is it?
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Definition
emotional stimuli produce two concurrent reactions, arousal and and the experience of emotion |
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Term
Two Factor Theory:
Who came up with it?
What is it? |
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Definition
- Stanley Schacter
- says that emotion is a joint effect of physiological arousal and cognitive appraisal
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Term
Cognitive-physiological theory:
Who came up with it?
What is it? |
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Definition
- Schacter and Singer
- says that emotion is a joint effect of physiological arousal and cognitive appraisal
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Term
What are the steps of the Body Reaction Theory:
1.
2.
3.
4.
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Definition
- perception
- body changes
- emotion
- behaviour
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Term
What are the steps of the Cannon-Bard Theory:
1.
2.
3. |
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Definition
- perception
- body and emotion changes
- behaviour
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Term
What are the steps in Schacter's two-factor theory:
1.
2.
3.
4. |
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Definition
- perception
- body changes adn cognitive label
- emotion
- behaviour
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Term
Who were early leaders in the behaviourist tradition? |
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Definition
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Term
Who did the Bobo doll study?
What did they find out? |
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Definition
- Badura did the Bobo doll studies.
- He found several factors that make a model’s observed behaviour influential.
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Term
Whostudied maze completion in rats?
What in this study was found to exist? |
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Definition
- Edward Tolman studied maze completion in rates.
- This demonstrated the existence of cognitive maps, also showed that latent learning can occur.
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Term
Observational learning:
Definition?
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Definition
- is the way a person learns new responses by observing the behaviour. “We just do what others do.
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Term
Latent learning:
Definition?
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Definition
- is a form of learning that is not immediately expressed behaviourally.
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Term
Instinctive drift:
Definition? |
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Definition
- is the tendency for an organism to revert to instinctive behaviour.
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Term
Discriminative stimuli:
Definition?
What else is it known as?
What are the steps in this process? |
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Definition
- is a stimulus that signals when a particular response is likely to be followed by a certain type of consequence.
- Referred to as the three-term contingency
- discriminative, stimulus, behaviour, consequence.
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Term
Intermittent Reinforcement Schedules:
What are they?
1. FR
2.VR
3.FI
4.VI
What do they do?
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Definition
- Fixed-Ration (FR)- reinforcements are given after a fixed number of responses. This has a high response rate.
2.Variable-Ratio (VR)- the average number of responses between reinforcers. 3.Fixed-Interval (FI)- reinforcer is given after a fixed period of time
4.Variable-Interval (VI)- the average interval between reinforcers is predetermined. |
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Term
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Definition
Reinforcement- when made contingent on a behaviour, increases the probability of that behaviour. It is the delivery of a reinforcement after response. It makes behaviour MORE likely. |
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Term
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Definition
- a stimulus that when made contingent on a response decreases the probability of that response. It is delivering a punishment after a response. It makes behaviour LESS likely.
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Term
Contingency
Reinforcement contingency |
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Definition
- is the relationship between a response and the change it produces in the environment.
- behaviour consistently followed by reward.
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Term
Positive reinforcement
Negative reinforcement |
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Definition
- is the action of delivering something good.
- is taking away of something bad.
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Term
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Definition
- allows escape from aversive stimulus. Ex: killing spiders to which you are afraid of.
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Term
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Definition
- allows avoidance of the stimulus before it begins. Ex: Not going to the attic to avoid the possibility of seeing spiders
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Term
Primary reinforcers
Secondary reinforcers |
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Definition
- exist at birth, were biologically determined. Ex: food, water.
- are stimuli that become associated with primary reinforcers so they now function as conditioned reinforcers. Ex: money, grades, smiles, clapping.
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Term
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Definition
- when the reinforcer is delivered every time the desired behaviour is shown. This is the quickest way to train new behaviour.
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Term
Radical Behaviourism:
Who used this?
What was it used for?
What did he test on? |
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Definition
- B.F. Skinner’s name for his own approach to behaviourism.
- This was used by Skinner to test behavioural outcomes.
- Rats performed behaviours followed by positive or negative consequences.
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Term
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Definition
- is a learning procedure that involved manipulating consequences of voluntary behaviour in order to alter the behaviour.
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Term
Conditioning Terms:
US
URS CS
CR |
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Definition
- Unconditioned Stimulus- Any stimulus that naturally provokes a behaviour. Ex: food in the dog’s mouth.
- Unconditioned Response- The behaviour provoked by the UCS. Ex: salivation.
- Conditioned Stimulus- A neutral stimulus that is able to provoke a behaviour only after associated with the UCS. Ex: The dog’s food dish.
- Conditioned Response- the behaviour provoked to the CS. Ex: Sight of a food dish became a CS for salivation.
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Term
Classical conditioning:
Definition?
Also known as?
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Definition
- Pavlovian conditioning
- involves repeated pairing of a stimulus with stimuli that naturally elicit a reflex response.
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Term
Operant Conditioning:
Who discovered it? |
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Definition
- B.F Skinner discovered ways to shape and change behaviour
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Term
Who argued that behaviours are more important than thoughts. He taught a small kid to fear rats using a loud noise, associating the rat with the loud noise. Found that the fear transferred to other similar looking things. |
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Definition
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Term
Who won a Nobel prize for his discovery that dogs learn by association. This came to be known as classical conditioning, the process by which a stimulus becomes associated with another stimulus and in response a reaction is produced. |
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Definition
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