Don't get Emotional!
Measuring the Mood
Walk a Mile in My Shoes
What's In The (Tool) Box?
Let's Throw It Back!
100

This perspective organizes emotions along continuous dimensions such as valence and arousal rather than as separate categories.

What is the dimensional perspective?

100

The self-report measure is most sensitive to which two aspects of emotion?

What is valence and arousal?
100

This type of empathy is also known as emotional contagion.

What is affective empathy?
100

Risk of suicide attempt in individuals with BD-1 is ____ to___ times higher than the general population.

What is 30 to 60?

100

Theories can be categorized into which three traditions of emotions?

What are feeling, motivational, and evaluative traditions?

200

This perspective argues that emotions like fear, sadness, and disgust each correspond to unique patterns of experience, physiology, and behavior

What is the discrete emotions perspective?

200

The EEG measure is most sensitive to which two aspects of emotion?

What is approach and avoidance?

200

This concept can look like empathy, but has been shown to inhibit helpful behavior.

What is personal distress?

200

Most prior studies have traditionally used clinician-administered ___ scales to check for symptoms like mania and depression.

What are mood scales?

200

According to a locationist hypothesis, the orbitofrontal cortex is linked to this emotion.

What is anger?
300

This emotion challenges the valence-approach link because it is negative in valence but can be associated with approach motivation.

What is anger?

300

This measure is most sensitive to valence, but only at particularly high levels of arousal.

What is the startle response magnitude?

300

Children make the distinction between self and other at this developmental stage of empathy.

What is egocentric empathy?

300

The study found that ___related measures were more important for classification than ___measures.

What are anger-related measures?

300
Izard argued that ___ are the primary motivators of human behavior.

What are emotions?

400

This framework was used by the authors to lay out the process of emotional responding.

What is the conceptual, component model?

400

Darwin proposed that facial displays are tied to behavior of the organism. This is in agreement with the idea that facial behavior is a ____ function.

What is a communicative function?

400

Self-reported cognitive empathy was shown to account for this percentage of the variance in actual performance on cognitive tasks.

What is 1% of the variance?

400

The paper talks about an early theory about how suicide can be thought of as ____?

What is aggression turned towards oneself?

400

This theory consists of 4 processes (core affect, conceptualization, emotion words, and executive attention).

What is the Conceptual Act Theory?

500

Feeling "relieved" would be considered a ____ arousal, _____ valence emotion.

What is a low arousal, high valence emotion?

500
Ekman showed that these six basic emotions can be recognized cross-culturally.

What is anger, fear, disgust, happiness, sadness, and surprise?

500

This effect can explain differences in how empathetic we are and how empathetic we think we are.

What is the Dunning-Kruger effect?

500

These four domains make up the NIH Toolbox Emotion Battery.

What are negative affect, psychological well-being, stress and self-efficacy, and social relationships?

500

Based on his ideas, this philosopher would not believe that animals have emotions.

Who is Descartes?

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