Essentials of Understanding Psychology
Essentials of Understanding Psychology
Essentials of Understanding Psychology
Understanding Psychology
9th Edition
By Robert Feldman
PowerPoints by Kimberly Foreman
Revised for 9th Ed by Cathleen Hunt
Copyright McGraw-Hill, Inc. 2011
Chapter 8:
Motivation and Emotion
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Motivation
Factors that direct and energize the behavior of humans
and other organisms
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Instinct Approaches
Born to Be Motivated
Instincts
Inborn patterns of behavior that are biologically determined
rather than learned
Psychologists do not agree on what, or how many, primary instincts
exist
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Drive-Reduction Approaches
Satisfying Our Needs
Suggest that a lack of some basic biological requirement
such as water produces a drive to obtain that requirement
Drive
Motivation tension, or arousal, that energized behavior to fulfill a need
Primary drives
Secondary drives
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Drive-Reduction Approaches
Homeostasis
Bodys tendency to maintain a steady internal state
Underlies primary drives
Uses feedback loops
Need for food, water, stable body temperature, and sleep
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Arousal Approaches
Beyond Drive Reduction
Seek to explain behavior in which the goal is to maintain or
increase excitement
People vary widely in the optimal level of arousal they seek out
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Incentive Approaches
Motivations Pull
Suggest that motivation stems from the desire to obtain
valued external goals, or incentives
Many psychologists believe that the internal drives proposed by
drive-reduction theory work in tandem with the external
incentives of incentive theory to push and pull behavior
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Cognitive Approaches
The Thoughts Behind Motivation
Suggest that motivation is a product of peoples thoughts,
expectations, and goals
Intrinsic motivation
Extrinsic motivation
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Maslows Hierarchy
Ordering Motivational Needs
Suggests that before more sophisticated, higher-order
needs can be met, certain primary needs must be satisfied
Abraham Maslow
Self-actualization
State of self-fulfillment in which people realize their highest
potential
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Maslows Hierarchy
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Societal rules
Cultural influences
Individual habits
Operant conditioning
Associating food with comfort and consolation
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Eating Disorders
Anorexia Nervosa
Refusal to eat while denying that their behavior and appearance
are unusual
Bulimia
Disorder in which people binge on large quantities of food
Purging
Exercise bulimia
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Sexual Motivation
Androgens
Male sex hormones
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Sexual Motivation
Masturbation: Solitary Sex
Sexual self-stimulation, often using the hand to rub the genitals
Heterosexuality
Sexual attraction and behavior directed to the other sex
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Sexual Motivation
Premarital Sex
Double standard
Dramatic change in public opinion
Marital Sex
Frequency varies
Extramarital sex
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Sexual Motivation
Homosexuality
Sexually attracted to members of their own sex
Gay
Lesbian
Bisexuality
Sexually attracted to people of the same sex and the other sex
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Sexual Motivation
Transsexualism
Transsexuals
People who believe they were born with the body of the other gender
Some seek sex-change operations
Transgenderism
Transsexuals and people who view themselves as a third gender,
transvestites, or others who believe that traditional male-female gender
classification inadequately characterizes themselves
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MODULE 26:
Understanding Emotional Experiences
What are emotions, and how do we experience them?
What are the functions of emotions?
What are the explanations for emotions?
How does nonverbal behavior relate to the expression of
emotions?
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Emotions
Feelings that generally have both physiological and
cognitive elements and that influence behavior
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Hierarchy of Emotions
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Happiness
Anger
Fear
Sadness
Disgust
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Theories of Emotion
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