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Chapter 11

                     Emotion



Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition
        Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
       ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Motives and Emotions

• Emotions are triggered from the outside
  whereas motived are triggered from
  inside. Emotional reactions are directed
  towards external circumstances whereas
  motives are directed at homeostatic
  balance.
• Motives are elicited by specific needs, but
  emotions are elicited by a range of things
  (think of all the things that make you
           Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition

  happy!)          Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                  ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Components of Emotion
• An emotion is a complex, multi-component
  episode that creates a readiness to act




           Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition
                   Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                  ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Components of Emotion

• Emotions are distinct from moods in several
  ways:
  – Emotions tend to have a clear cause (about
    something or someone), are typically brief (last
    seconds or minutes), and implicate multiple
    component systems (moods are only salient at the
    subjective experience level)
  – In research there is much interest in the detailed
    nature of components of emotion, and the
    mechanisms by which they influence each other

            Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition
                    Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                   ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Cognitive Appraisal & Emotion
• Cognitive appraisal
  – It is the interpretation of the personal meaning of current
    circumstances (person-environment relationship) that results in
    emotion
  – Cognitive appraisal is largely responsible for differentiating
    emotions
• Discovery of appraisals
  – Two-factor theory of emotions – emotions are the result of a
    combination of an initial state of unexplained arousal & cognitive
    appraisal for that arousal – mixed support- Schacter & Singer
  – Misattribution of arousal – physiological arousal can be
    erroneously attributed to subsequent event (Running up stairs)


                Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition
                        Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                       ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Cognitive Appraisal & Emotion

• Themes & dimensions of appraisals
  – People’s appraisals of situations lead to subjective
    experience of emotions, associated arousal & other
    components of emotional response
     • Minimalist appraisal theories – reduce number of appraisal
       dimensions to a minimum, often based on fundamental
       themes – emphasises importance of emotion-specific core
       relational themes (e.g. irrevocable loss for sadness)
     • Dimensional appraisal theories – identify a range of appraisal
       dimensions thought sufficient for differences among
       emotions (e.g. desirability of event & whether it occurs)


              Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition
                      Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                     ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Cognitive Appraisal & Emotion

• Conscious & unconscious appraisals
  – Appraisals can occur at unconscious levels – people
    experience emotion without understanding why
  – Cognitive appraisals in emotion processes similar to
    other types of cognition - resulting in part from automatic
    processing & in part from controlled processing
• Appraisals in the brain
  – Amygdala (in the lower brain) – key role in automatic
    appraisals which supports idea of appraisals occurring
    both unconsciously & consciously
              Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition
                      Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                     ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Subjective Experiences & Emotion

• Subjective experience of emotion
  – This feeling component is, by definition, within awareness
  – One output of the appraisal process is change in
    subjective experience
• Feelings modify attention & learning
  – Current feelings direct attention to events that match our
    feelings, as a result we learn more about those events
  – Feelings influence which memories are more accessible
    & those memories influence what is easy to learn at the
    moment (Hypnosis experiment-happy or sad-story-
    identification with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introductionone day later)
                 Use
                     and recollection to Psychology 15 edition        th

                      Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                     ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Subjective Experiences & Emotion

• Feelings modify evaluations & judgements
  – Our feelings can affect evaluations of other people,
    and of inanimate objects (My pseudo prosopagnosia)
  – Feelings also affect our judgements of risk – if we are
    fearful, more likely to see world as uncertain &
    uncontrollable; if feeling angry/happy, more likely to
    see world as certain & controllable
  – Positive emotions broaden our habitual modes of
    thinking which makes it more likely to find that silver
    lining in a cloud

             Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition
                     Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                    ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Thought & Action Tendencies &
              Emotion
• Thought-action tendencies
  – Refers to urges – one way that feelings guide
    behavior & information processing
     • With most negative emotions, people’s thought-action
       tendencies become narrow & specific
     • With most positive emotions, people’s thought-action
       tendencies become broad & more open to possibilities




             Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition
                     Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                    ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Positive Emotions

• Positive emotions broaden our thinking &
  actions
  – They expand our typical ways of thinking & being in
    the world, pushing us to be more creative & curious
    etc.
• Positive emotions build our personal resources
  – Emotions are short-lived but can have lasting effects
  – Positive emotions broaden our thinking & actions –
    over time this leads to a store of resources to draw on
    in times of trouble – broaden-and-build theory – which
    may optimiseAtkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15 edition
             Use with
                      long-term health & well-being                  th

                     Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                    ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Bodily Changes & Emotion

• Bodily changes & emotion
  – Intense negative emotions involve physiological arousal
    caused by activation of sympathetic division of
    autonomic nervous system: prepares for energy output
  – Positive emotions have undoing effect on lingering
    arousal from negative emotions
• Intensity of emotions
  – People with spinal chord injuries (limit feedback from
    autonomic nervous system) report less intense emotions
  – Visceral perception plays a role in intensity of emotions
              Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition
                      Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                     ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Bodily Changes & Emotion
• Differentiation of emotions
  – James-Lange theory holds that autonomic arousal
    differentiates the emotions




             Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition
                     Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                    ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Facial Expression & Emotion

• Communications of emotion through facial
  expressions
  – Certain facial expressions seem to be universal in
    meaning, regardless of culture
  – Facial expressions of one person can change
    behavior of another (e.g. mother/child & visual cliff)
  – Certain aspects of facial expression are learned –
    display rules specify types of emotions people should
    express in certain situations and appropriate behavior
    for particular emotions

             Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition
                     Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                    ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Facial Expression & Emotion

• The facial feedback hypothesis
  – Facial feedback hypothesis – the idea that facial
    expressions, in addition to their communicative
    function, also contribute to our subjective experience
    of emotions




             Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition
                     Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                    ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Responses to Emotion:
          Emotion Regulation
• Emotion regulation
  – Refers to people’s responses to their own emotions
  – Sometimes people have goal of intensifying emotion
    while other times people want to minimise emotion –
    ability to do so predicts social success
  – Suppressing facial expression increases autonomic
    arousal & amygdala activation, & also impairs
    memory



            Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition
                    Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                   ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Responses to Emotion:
          Emotion Regulation
• People develop different strategies to
  control/regulate emotions




            Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition
                    Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                   ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Emotions, Gender & Culture
• Emotions, gender & culture
  – We can conceptualise differences in emotion by gender
    & culture as either “front-end” (those that begin with
    appraisal process) or “back-end” (responses to emotion)
• Gender differences
  – Men & women hold strong beliefs about gender
    differences in emotions (stereotypes)
     • Gender differences in reported emotion vanish when men &
       women are asked how they feel in the moment
     • Gender differences may stem mainly from back-end processes
       - ways in which men & women regulate & express emotions

              Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition
                      Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                     ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Emotions, Gender & Culture

• Cultural differences
  – Cultural differences in emotion relate to how values
    associated with collectivism & individualism shape
    emotional experiences
     • Collectivist culture focuses more on relationships which
       affect both appraisal processes (front-end) and regulation
       strategies (back-end) in the experience of emotions
     • Emotions appear to bind people together in collectivist
       cultures, and define individual uniqueness in individualist
       cultures



              Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition
                      Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                     ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Aggression
• Aggression as a drive
  – Psychoanalytic theory argues that when a person’s
    effort to reach a goal are blocked, this induces
    aggressive drive
     • Cause of aggression is frustration
     • Aggression has properties of basic drive (controversial)
     • Support for biological basis for aggression come from studies
       that show aggressive drive in some species. Also,
       stimulation of hypothalamus can produce aggressive
       behavior in some animals
     • In humans & certain other mammals, aggressive behavior
       mainly under cortical control & therefore environment & past
       experiences influence it

              Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition
                      Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                     ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Aggression

• Aggression as a learned response
  – Social-learning theory proposes that aggression
    learned through observation or imitation & the more
    often it is reinforced, more likely it is to occur
     • Frustration provokes aggression in people who have learned
       to respond to adverse situations with aggressive behaviour
     • Support for social-learning theory from studies showing
       aggression can be learned through imitation. Also, children
       are more likely to express aggressive responses when they
       are reinforced for such actions rather than punished



             Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition
                     Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                    ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Aggression




Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition
        Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
       ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Aggression

• Aggressive expression & catharsis
  – Catharsis – purging an emotion by experiencing it
    intensely
  – If aggression is a drive, expressing aggression should
    be cathartic, leading to reduction in intensity of
    aggressive feelings & actions. If aggression is learned,
    expressing aggression could lead to an increase in
    such actions – evidence favors learned-response view
  – Can also look at effects of indirectly (vicariously)
    expressing aggression, e.g. watching violence on TV

              Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition
                      Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                     ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Aggression
• ...Aggressive expression & catharsis
  – To examine whether watching violence increases
    aggression or vice versa – longitudinal study




            Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition
                    Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                   ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
Aggression

• ...Aggressive expression & catharsis
  – Results of vicarious expressions of aggression also
    do not support idea of aggression as catharsis or
    aggression as a drive
  – Aggression may often occur when a person is
    frustrated, but it does not always follow frustration –
    many social conditions & cues either increase or
    decrease person’s tendency to act aggressively




             Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition
                     Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar
                    ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning

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Emotions Chapter Summary

  • 1. Chapter 11 Emotion Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 2. Motives and Emotions • Emotions are triggered from the outside whereas motived are triggered from inside. Emotional reactions are directed towards external circumstances whereas motives are directed at homeostatic balance. • Motives are elicited by specific needs, but emotions are elicited by a range of things (think of all the things that make you Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition happy!) Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 3. Components of Emotion • An emotion is a complex, multi-component episode that creates a readiness to act Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 4. Components of Emotion • Emotions are distinct from moods in several ways: – Emotions tend to have a clear cause (about something or someone), are typically brief (last seconds or minutes), and implicate multiple component systems (moods are only salient at the subjective experience level) – In research there is much interest in the detailed nature of components of emotion, and the mechanisms by which they influence each other Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 5. Cognitive Appraisal & Emotion • Cognitive appraisal – It is the interpretation of the personal meaning of current circumstances (person-environment relationship) that results in emotion – Cognitive appraisal is largely responsible for differentiating emotions • Discovery of appraisals – Two-factor theory of emotions – emotions are the result of a combination of an initial state of unexplained arousal & cognitive appraisal for that arousal – mixed support- Schacter & Singer – Misattribution of arousal – physiological arousal can be erroneously attributed to subsequent event (Running up stairs) Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 6. Cognitive Appraisal & Emotion • Themes & dimensions of appraisals – People’s appraisals of situations lead to subjective experience of emotions, associated arousal & other components of emotional response • Minimalist appraisal theories – reduce number of appraisal dimensions to a minimum, often based on fundamental themes – emphasises importance of emotion-specific core relational themes (e.g. irrevocable loss for sadness) • Dimensional appraisal theories – identify a range of appraisal dimensions thought sufficient for differences among emotions (e.g. desirability of event & whether it occurs) Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 7. Cognitive Appraisal & Emotion • Conscious & unconscious appraisals – Appraisals can occur at unconscious levels – people experience emotion without understanding why – Cognitive appraisals in emotion processes similar to other types of cognition - resulting in part from automatic processing & in part from controlled processing • Appraisals in the brain – Amygdala (in the lower brain) – key role in automatic appraisals which supports idea of appraisals occurring both unconsciously & consciously Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 8. Subjective Experiences & Emotion • Subjective experience of emotion – This feeling component is, by definition, within awareness – One output of the appraisal process is change in subjective experience • Feelings modify attention & learning – Current feelings direct attention to events that match our feelings, as a result we learn more about those events – Feelings influence which memories are more accessible & those memories influence what is easy to learn at the moment (Hypnosis experiment-happy or sad-story- identification with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introductionone day later) Use and recollection to Psychology 15 edition th Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 9. Subjective Experiences & Emotion • Feelings modify evaluations & judgements – Our feelings can affect evaluations of other people, and of inanimate objects (My pseudo prosopagnosia) – Feelings also affect our judgements of risk – if we are fearful, more likely to see world as uncertain & uncontrollable; if feeling angry/happy, more likely to see world as certain & controllable – Positive emotions broaden our habitual modes of thinking which makes it more likely to find that silver lining in a cloud Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 10. Thought & Action Tendencies & Emotion • Thought-action tendencies – Refers to urges – one way that feelings guide behavior & information processing • With most negative emotions, people’s thought-action tendencies become narrow & specific • With most positive emotions, people’s thought-action tendencies become broad & more open to possibilities Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 11. Positive Emotions • Positive emotions broaden our thinking & actions – They expand our typical ways of thinking & being in the world, pushing us to be more creative & curious etc. • Positive emotions build our personal resources – Emotions are short-lived but can have lasting effects – Positive emotions broaden our thinking & actions – over time this leads to a store of resources to draw on in times of trouble – broaden-and-build theory – which may optimiseAtkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15 edition Use with long-term health & well-being th Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 12. Bodily Changes & Emotion • Bodily changes & emotion – Intense negative emotions involve physiological arousal caused by activation of sympathetic division of autonomic nervous system: prepares for energy output – Positive emotions have undoing effect on lingering arousal from negative emotions • Intensity of emotions – People with spinal chord injuries (limit feedback from autonomic nervous system) report less intense emotions – Visceral perception plays a role in intensity of emotions Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 13. Bodily Changes & Emotion • Differentiation of emotions – James-Lange theory holds that autonomic arousal differentiates the emotions Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 14. Facial Expression & Emotion • Communications of emotion through facial expressions – Certain facial expressions seem to be universal in meaning, regardless of culture – Facial expressions of one person can change behavior of another (e.g. mother/child & visual cliff) – Certain aspects of facial expression are learned – display rules specify types of emotions people should express in certain situations and appropriate behavior for particular emotions Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 15. Facial Expression & Emotion • The facial feedback hypothesis – Facial feedback hypothesis – the idea that facial expressions, in addition to their communicative function, also contribute to our subjective experience of emotions Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 16. Responses to Emotion: Emotion Regulation • Emotion regulation – Refers to people’s responses to their own emotions – Sometimes people have goal of intensifying emotion while other times people want to minimise emotion – ability to do so predicts social success – Suppressing facial expression increases autonomic arousal & amygdala activation, & also impairs memory Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 17. Responses to Emotion: Emotion Regulation • People develop different strategies to control/regulate emotions Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 18. Emotions, Gender & Culture • Emotions, gender & culture – We can conceptualise differences in emotion by gender & culture as either “front-end” (those that begin with appraisal process) or “back-end” (responses to emotion) • Gender differences – Men & women hold strong beliefs about gender differences in emotions (stereotypes) • Gender differences in reported emotion vanish when men & women are asked how they feel in the moment • Gender differences may stem mainly from back-end processes - ways in which men & women regulate & express emotions Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 19. Emotions, Gender & Culture • Cultural differences – Cultural differences in emotion relate to how values associated with collectivism & individualism shape emotional experiences • Collectivist culture focuses more on relationships which affect both appraisal processes (front-end) and regulation strategies (back-end) in the experience of emotions • Emotions appear to bind people together in collectivist cultures, and define individual uniqueness in individualist cultures Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 20. Aggression • Aggression as a drive – Psychoanalytic theory argues that when a person’s effort to reach a goal are blocked, this induces aggressive drive • Cause of aggression is frustration • Aggression has properties of basic drive (controversial) • Support for biological basis for aggression come from studies that show aggressive drive in some species. Also, stimulation of hypothalamus can produce aggressive behavior in some animals • In humans & certain other mammals, aggressive behavior mainly under cortical control & therefore environment & past experiences influence it Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 21. Aggression • Aggression as a learned response – Social-learning theory proposes that aggression learned through observation or imitation & the more often it is reinforced, more likely it is to occur • Frustration provokes aggression in people who have learned to respond to adverse situations with aggressive behaviour • Support for social-learning theory from studies showing aggression can be learned through imitation. Also, children are more likely to express aggressive responses when they are reinforced for such actions rather than punished Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 22. Aggression Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 23. Aggression • Aggressive expression & catharsis – Catharsis – purging an emotion by experiencing it intensely – If aggression is a drive, expressing aggression should be cathartic, leading to reduction in intensity of aggressive feelings & actions. If aggression is learned, expressing aggression could lead to an increase in such actions – evidence favors learned-response view – Can also look at effects of indirectly (vicariously) expressing aggression, e.g. watching violence on TV Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 24. Aggression • ...Aggressive expression & catharsis – To examine whether watching violence increases aggression or vice versa – longitudinal study Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning
  • 25. Aggression • ...Aggressive expression & catharsis – Results of vicarious expressions of aggression also do not support idea of aggression as catharsis or aggression as a drive – Aggression may often occur when a person is frustrated, but it does not always follow frustration – many social conditions & cues either increase or decrease person’s tendency to act aggressively Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN 9781844807284 © 2009 Cengage Learning