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Transcript
Emotions and
Emotional Intelligence
Aj. Sittichai Thongworn
1
Overview
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•
•
•
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What is Emotion?
Functions of Emotion
Basic Emotions
Theories of Emotion
Emotion & Decision
Making
• Emotional Intelligence
2
What is emotion?
• Emotion has the root of Latin word means ‘movement’
• Emotions are feelings that generally have both
physiological and cognitive elements and that influence
behavior. (Feldman, 1996)
• Emotions are composed of a subjective component, a
physiological component, and an expressive
component.
3
Functions of Emotion
 Motivate us to take action
• There is an action urge connected to specific
emotions that is an automatic, built-in part of our
behavior.
• We also tend to take certain actions in order to
experience positive emotions and minimize the
probability of feeling negative emotions.
4
Functions of Emotion (Cont.)
 Help us survive, thrive, and avoid danger
• Charles Darwin believed that emotions are
adaptations that allow both humans and animals
to survive and reproduce.
• Emotions serve an adaptive role in our lives by
motivating us to act quickly and take actions that
will maximize our chances for success.
5
Functions of Emotion (Cont.)
 Help us make decisions
• Our emotions have a major influence on the
decisions we make.
• Researchers have found that people with certain
types of brain damage that impairs their ability to
experience emotions also have an decreased
ability to make good decisions.
6
Functions of Emotion (Cont.)
 Allow other people to understand us
• When we interact with other people, it is
important to give cues to help them understand
how we are feeling.
• These cues might involve emotional expression
through body language, such as various facial
expressions connected with the particular
emotions we are experiencing
7
Functions of Emotion (Cont.)
 Allow us to understand others
• Social communication is an important part of our
daily lives and relationships
• Allows us to respond appropriately and build
deeper, more meaningful relationships with
others
• Also allows us to communicate effectively in a
variety of social situations
8
Are human emotions universal?
9
Universal Emotions
• Margaret Mead believed that facial expressions and
the emotions are determined by culture
• Charles Darwin argued that human expressions of
emotion were both innate and universal across
cultures.
• Ekman set out to test this notion and found that
facial expressions are cross-cultural
• Ekman's research revealed that there is a universal
set of certain facial expressions used in both the
Western and Eastern worlds.
10
11
Six Basic Emotions
12
Theories of Emotion
• The James-Lange Theories of Emotions
• The Cannon-Bard Theory of Emotions
• Schachter & Singer’s Theories of Emotions
13
The James-Lange Theories of Emotions
• Proposed by psychologist William James and
physiologist Carl Lange
• Emotions occur as a result of physiological reactions
to events
• Our brains interpret specific physiological changes
as feelings or emotions and that there is a different
physiological pattern underlying each emotion.
14
The James-Lange Theories of Emotions
15
Criticisms
• Different emotions are not necessarily associated with
different patterns of physiological responses
• Some complex emotions may require a considerable
amount of interpretation or appraisal of the situation.
• People whose spinal cords have been severed at the
neck are deprived of most of the feedback from their
physiological responses, still experience emotions.
• Emotions alter more rapidly than those physiological
reactions.
16
James- Lang Theory Is Not Totally Wrong
I’m very happy.
I’m really sad.
17
The Facial Feedback Hypothesis
• The facial feedback hypothesis states that facial
movement can influence emotional experience.
18
The Facial Feedback Hypothesis
• Strack, Martin, & Stepper devised an ingenious way
to get the subjects to flex certain muscles of their
face without knowing why.
• They told participants that the experiment related
to how people learn to write after amputation or
paralysis of their arms.
• They had subjects hold a pencil in one of three
ways.
19
The Facial Feedback Hypothesis
• The first group held the pencil widthwise between
their teeth, forcing a smile.
• The second group held the pencil in their lips
lengthwise, which means they couldn’t smile, and
were actually making kind of a frown.
• The control group held the pencil in their hand.
• Then the subjects looked at some cartoons, and
rated how funny they were.
20
The Facial Feedback Hypothesis
• The “smile” group gave the cartoons much higher
“funny” ratings than the “frown” group, while the
control group was somewhere in the middle.
21
The Facial Feedback Hypothesis
• Andreas Hennenlotter and
colleagues, asked
participants to perform a
facial expression imitation
task in an fMRI scanner
before and two weeks
after receiving botox
injections.
22
The Facial Feedback Hypothesis
• During imitation of angry facial expressions, botox
decreased activation of brain regions implicated in
emotional processing and emotional experience
relative to activations before botox injection.
• These findings show that facial feedback modulates
neural processing of emotional content, and that
botox changes how the human brain responds to
emotional situations.
23
The Cannon-Bard Theory of Emotions
• Developed by Walter Cannon and Philip Bard.
• We feel emotions and experience physiological
reactions such as sweating, trembling and muscle
tension simultaneously.
• Emotions result when the thalamus sends a
message to the brain in response to a stimulus,
resulting in a physiological reaction.
24
The Cannon-Bard Theory of Emotions
25
Schachter & Singer’s Theories of
Emotions
• Proposed by Stanley Schachter and Jerome Singer
known as the two-factor theory of emotion.
• There are two key components: physical arousal and
a cognitive label.
• Focuses on the interaction between physical arousal
and how we cognitively label that arousal.
26
Schachter & Singer’s Theories of
Emotions
27
Biological Basis of Emotion
• Any stimulus that arouses an emotion alters the
activity of the autonomic nervous system (ANS)
• The autonomic nervous system consists of the
sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems,
which sometimes act in opposing ways and
sometimes cooperate.
• The sympathetic nervous system readies the body for
emergency action; the parasympathetic nervous
system supports digestive and other nonemergency
functions.
28
29
Biological Basis of Emotion
• Researchers often measure activity of the
sympathetic nervous system as an indicator of
emotional arousal.
• Physiological measurements do not tell us which
emotion someone is feeling.
• Neuroscientists use brain scanning or imaging
techniques to identify structures and neural activities
in the living brain.
30
Brain and Emotion
• Researchers aroused emotions in various ways and
then used PET (Positron Emission Tomography) or
fMRI (Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging ) scans
to identify which brain areas became aroused.
• No brain area appears specific to one type of
emotion.
31
Brain and Emotion: The Case of
Whitman
• Charles Whitman served as a
Marine before enrolling in the
University of Texas.
• Whitman killed his mother and
wife and on August 1, 1966, went
atop a 300-foot tower, targeting
people in the vicinity.
• He killed 16 and injure many
others before he was killed by
police, who stormed the tower.
Charles Whitman
• Charles had left a note. It read: “If my life insurance
policy is valid please pay off my debts... donate the
rest anonymously to a mental health foundation.
Maybe research can prevent further tragedies of
this type”.
• Post-mortem autopsy of his brain revealed a
glioblastoma multiforme tumor the size of a
walnut, erupting from beneath the thalamus,
impacting the hypothalamus, extending into the
temporal lobe and compressing the amygdaloid
nucleus
Limbic System and Emotion
• Amygdala
• Hippocampus
• Thalamus
• Hypothalamus
35
Amygdala
• Plays an important role on
the mediation and control
of major affective activities
like friendship, love and
affection, on the expression
of mood and, mainly, on
fear, rage and aggression
36
Hippocampus
• Plays an important role in
consolidating information
from short-term memory into
long-term memory.
• Damage to both sides of the
hippocampus can impede the
ability to form new memories,
known as anterograde
amnesia.
37
Thalamus
• Processes and transmits
movement and sensory
information.
• Essentially a relay station, taking in
sensory information and then
passing it on to the cerebral
cortex.
• The cerebral cortex also sends
information to the thalamus,
which then sends this information
to other systems.
38
Hypothalamus
• Connects with many other regions of the brain and is
responsible for controlling hunger, thirst, emotions,
body temperature regulation, and circadian
rhythms.
• The hypothalamus also controls the pituitary gland
by secreting hormones, which gives the
hypothalamus a great deal of control over many
body functions.
39
Emotion and Decision Making: The Case of Elliot
• Elliott excelled in college and rose rapidly through the
ranks of a building firm to become comptroller at the
age of 32.
• At the age of 35, doctors diagnosed Elliot with a brain
tumor.
• Elliot had undergone a radical personality change after
an operation to remove a brain tumor on the surface
of his frontal lobes.
• Testing of Elliot revealed that his intelligence,
attention and memory were unaffected.
• Elliot, however, had lost the ability to experience
40
emotion.
Emotion and Decision Making: The Case of Elliot
• Antonio Damasio found that the operation to remove
the tumor was successful, but the surgery left Elliot
with bilateral damage to his orbitofrontal cortex (OFC).
• OFC extensively connects with the limbic system.
• It can also influence the autonomic nervous system
through its connections with the hypothalamus and
other brainstem structures.
• Neuroscientists believed that OFC might use autonomic
signals to guide decision-making.
41
Emotion and Decision Making: The Case of Elliot
• Bodily states corresponding to the emotions produced
while evaluating different courses of action help to
facilitate normal decision-making.
• The role of OFC is to store associations between
patterns of environmental inputs and the somatic
states that those inputs produce.
• Damage to OFC destroys patients’ ability to activate
the somatic states so that the patient must rely on a
cognitive appraisal of a decision.
42
Emotional Intelligence: EI
• The capacity for
recognizing our own
feelings and those in
others, for motivating
ourselves, for managing
emotions well in ourselves
and in our relationships.
(Daniel Goleman)
43
Why Emotional Intelligence Matters?
• It has been said that your IQ can land you a job
but your lack of EQ can get you fired.
• EQ predicts higher work performance better
than IQ.
• Your emotional intelligence and social
intelligence are much greater determinants of
the success you will achieve in life.
44
Why Emotional Intelligence Matters?
• It has been estimated that over 80% of our
health problems are stress related.
• Our emotional skills have a direct and
important bearing on our relationships with
others.
• There is a direct connection between poor
emotional skills and mental disorders
• EI is one of the best predictors of divorce and
marital satisfaction.
45
The 4 Branches of Emotional Intelligence
• Perceiving Emotions: The first step in understanding
emotions is to accurately perceive them. In many
cases, this might involve understanding nonverbal
signals such as body language and facial expressions.
• Reasoning With Emotions: The next step involves
using emotions to promote thinking and cognitive
activity. Emotions help prioritize what we pay
attention and react to; we respond emotionally to
things that garner our attention.
46
The 4 Branches of Emotional Intelligence
• Understanding Emotions: The emotions that we
perceive can carry a wide variety of meanings. If
someone is expressing angry emotions, the observer
must interpret the cause of their anger and what it
might mean.
• Managing Emotions: The ability to manage emotions
effectively is a key part of emotional intelligence.
Regulating emotions, responding appropriately and
responding to the emotions of others are all
important aspect of emotional management.
47
Gender and Emotional Intelligence
• Women experience
positive and negative
emotions more
intensely than men.
• Women are more
expressive of sadness,
disgust, fear, surprise,
happiness or smiling
and anger.
48
Gender and Emotional Intelligence
• Women are more capable of decoding nonverbal
emotional information, have greater emotional
understanding, are more sensitive to the emotions of
others, and are more expressive and show greater
interpersonal competencies .
49
Gender and Emotional Intelligence
• Men serving as hunter-gatherers needed to take more
risks and be more dominating, while women who stayed
home and cared for young needed to be more nurturing
and cautious.
• Social and culture provides structure, guidelines,
expectations, and rules to help people understand and
interpret emotions.
50
Emotional and Physical Pain Activate
Similar Brain Regions
• When people feel emotional pain, the same areas of
the brain get activated as when people feel physical
pain: the anterior insula and the anterior cingulate
cortex.
• These regions were activated when people
experienced an experimental social rejection from
peers.
• The same regions were activated when people who
had recently broken up with romantic partners
viewed pictures of the former partner.
51
Why Emotional Pain Is Worse Than
Physical Pain?
• Memories trigger emotional pain
• Physical pain garners far more
empathy from others than
emotional pain
• Emotional pain echoes in ways
physical pain does not
• Emotional pain can damage our
self-esteem and long-term
mental health
52
How to Improve Emotional Intelligence?
• Observe how you react to
people.
– Do you rush to judgment
before you know all of
the facts?
• Try to put yourself in their
place, and be more open
and accepting of their
perspectives and needs.
53
How to Improve emotional intelligence
• Do a self-evaluation.
- What are your weaknesses?
- Are you willing to accept that
you're not perfect and that you
could work on some areas to
make yourself a better person?
54
How to Improve emotional intelligence
• Examine how you react to
stressful situations.
- Do you become upset every
time there's a delay or
something doesn't happen the
way you want?
- Do you blame others or
become angry at them, even
when it's not their fault?
55
How to Improve emotional intelligence
• Take responsibility for your actions. If you hurt
someone's feelings, apologize directly – don't
ignore what you did or avoid the person.
• People are usually more willing to forgive and
forget if you make an honest attempt to make
things right.
56
How to Improve emotional intelligence
• Examine how your actions will affect others
• If your decision will impact others, put yourself in
their place.
- How will they feel if you do this?
- Would you want that experience?
57