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MOTIVATION & EMOTION Motivation • Motivation refers to the driving force behind behavior that leads us to pursue some things and avoid others – What we want to do – How strongly we want to do it Psychodynamic Perspective • Psychodynamic perspective ( dual–instinct model) focuses on biological basis (drives) for motivation and includes: • Sex – Love, lust, intimacy • Aggression • Aggressive behavior • Desire to control other people and the environment Psychodynamic Perspective • Psychodynamic theorists have added to more basic drives to Freud’s dual-instinct model of sex and aggression • Relatedness to others • Self-Esteem Psychodynamic Perspective • Psychodynamic theorists have also advanced Freud’s concept of drives to include: • Wishes – A desired state associated with emotion or arousal • Fears – An undesired state associated with unpleasant feelings Psychodynamic Perspective • Conscious and unconscious motivations – Conscious- We are aware of a given motivator – Unconscious- Drives behavior but we are not aware of the motivator • Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) – Used to detect unconscious motives – Includes a series of ambiguous pictures – Participants make up a story about the pictures Psychodynamic Perspective • Self-report questions – Tap into conscious motives – Explicit in nature • TAT – Taps into unconscious motives – Implicit in nature Behaviorist Perspective • Theory of Operant Conditioning – Focus on drive reduction • Drive reduction involves meeting a current need: – Hungry - Find food – Thirst - Find water Behaviorist Perspective • Primary Drives – Food-Water-Shelter – Reproduction of the species • Individual • Society • Secondary Drives – Learned drives • Status objects such as type of car, size of house Cognitive Theory • Expectancy-value theory – Actual ability – Perceived ability • Goal-setting theory – Conscious goals for desired outcomes Other Motivators • Intrinsic motivation – Suggests we do something due to the enjoyment we receive from doing it • Making love • Self-determination theory – Suggests we have innate motivation for: • Competence • Autonomy • Relatedness Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs • • • • • Self-Actualization Esteem Belongingness Safety Physiological Maslow’s Hierarchy • The paradox of Maslow’s hierarchy revolves around the fact that to selfactualize one must often place lower order motivations at risk • Examples of this paradox include: – Moving away from home to go to graduate school – Starting your own small business ERG Theory • Applies Maslow’s hierarchy to the work environment • Suggests that employees are motivated by: – Existence • Will I still have a job tomorrow – Relatedness • Do I get along with my co-workers – Growth • Can I earn a promotion and do more interesting work Evolutionary Perspective • Instincts – Behaviors that require no learning – What seems instinctive in one culture is ignored in another culture – Flexibility- The human propensity to come up with novel approaches to solve problems • Maximizing inclusive fitness – Maximize reproductive success – Best genetic mate versus someone you truly love Cultural Impact on Motivation • Socioeconomic influences – Advertising motivates us to secure certain objects – The desire to fit in motivates consumption patterns What makes us hungry • Biological – Dropping levels of glucose and lipids in the bloodstream – Receptors in the liver and brain send signals to the hypothalamus – We become hungry • External Cues – Time of day – Bakery blowing smell of bake goods onto the street Eating as a Motivator • Metabolism – Processes by which the body transforms food into energy • Three phases of consumption – Absorptive - Ingest food – Fasting - Body transforms food into energy – Homeostasis – Constant state Homeostasis • Set point – Optimal level we strive to maintain • Feedback mechanisms – Provide body with the state of the system • Hungry– full • Corrective mechanisms – Seek to restore system to the set point • Encourages us to eat or stop eating • Satiety mechanisms – Turns off ingestive behavior Obesity • Defined as 15% or more above the ideal weight for one’s height and age • Correlates with socioeconomic status • Increased risk for: – Heart attack – Diabetes (Type II) – High blood pressure Culture, Gender and Weight • North America is obsessed with thinness • More pressure on women to be thin • African-American women reported as more satisfied with their weight than white women • Negative stereotypes about obese • Discrimination based on obesity is still legal Sexual Motivation • Universal drive that varies in its expression by culture and by individual • Reproduction of the species Sexual Response Cycles • • • • Excitement Plateau Orgasm Resolution Sexual Motivation • Organizational Effects – Involves developing circuitry of the brain to perform sexual activity • Activational Effects – Hormones active brain circuits involved with sexual desire Sexual Orientation • The direction of one’s enduring sexual attraction • Attitudes towards homosexuality vary widely across cultures and within a given culture • Recent research suggests a homosexual orientation is heritable and not a conscious choice Psychosocial Motives • Need for Relatedness – We need to belong to something greater than ourselves • Family, social club, group of friends at work • Attachment Motivation – Desire for physical and psychological closeness (Intimacy) to another person • Hugs • Affiliation – Physical and social interaction with like minded people Achievement & Other Agency Motives • Includes: – – – – – Power Competence Achievement Autonomy Self-esteem Need for Achievement • The need for achievement varies widely by culture • Performance - Approach – Seek to attain a goal (achieve success) • Performance – Avoidance – Seek to avoid a hazard (avoid failure) • Mastery Goals – Master a skill such as become an accomplished painter Emotion • Emotion involves an evaluative response (positive or negative feeling) that often includes some combination of: – Physiological arousal – Subjective experience – Behavioral or emotional expression Emotion • James-Lange Theory – Emotions originate in peripheral nervous system responses that the central nervous system then interprets • Cannon-Baird Theory – Emotion-inducing stimuli simultaneously elicit both an emotional experience and bodily responses Emotion as a Subjective Exp. • Involves what it feels like to experience a given emotion such as sadness, joy, etc. • The subjective experiences of individuals vary widely Emotional Expression • Refers to the overt behavioral signs of emotion • We use different facial muscles for different emotions • Facial expressions not only reflect an motion but also influence the experience of emotion • Display Rules – Patterns of expression considered appropriate within a given culture Basic Emotions • Include: – – – – – Fear Anger Happiness Sadness Disgust • Positive Affect (Pleasant emotions) • Negative Affect (Unpleasant emotions) Emotions and the Body • Emotional processes are distributed throughout the nervous system • Amygdala – Involved in evaluating emotional significance – Also involved in evaluating other people’s emotions Emotions and the Body • Emotional reactions appear to follow two distinct neural pathways: • A quick response runs from the thalamus to the amygdala and then to the hypothalamus • A slower response runs from the thalamus-to the cortex- to the amygdala and then to the hypothalamus • Emotional Regulation – Refers to our efforts to control emotional states Theories on Emotions • Psychodynamic Perspective – We can be unconscious of our emotional experience • Cognitive Perspective – Schachter–Singer Theory suggests that emotion occurs as people interpret their physiological arousal • Evolutionary Perspective – Emotion plays an important role in communication between members of a species