Theories of Motivation
Biological Motives
Social Motives
Emotions
Misc.
100

A balanced State

Homeostasis

100

A person who is 30 percent or more above his or her ideal body weight. 

Obese

100

Deciding not to try out for the basketball team because you may not make it anyway would be an example of?

Fear of Failure

100

Your experience activates the hypothalamus
Messages are sent to throughout the body 

You feel an emotion and your body reacts at the same time. 

Cannon-Bard Theory

100

Innate tendencies that determine behavior

Instincts

200

engaging in activities that either reduce biological needs or help us obtain external incentives. 

Extrinsic Motivation

200

The part of the hypothalamus that can cause one to stop eating. 

Ventromedial 

200

According to JW Atkinson, this is your estimated likelihood of success.

Expectancy

200

A set of complex reactions to stimuli involving subjective feelings, psychological arousal, and observable behavior. 

Emotion

200

Biological or psychological requirement of an organism

Need

300

an external stimulus, reinforcer, or reward that motivates behavior. 

Incentive

300

External cues that can effect eating

psychological hunger factors

300

This  states; Too easy a task or too difficult a task means we do not learn anything about how competent we are. 

Competency Theory

300

The muscles in your face move to form an expression

Your brain interprets muscle movement

You feel an emotion

You demonstrate observable behavior

Facial Feedback Theory

300

A fundamental theory in psychology suggesting that our fundamental needs must be met, before we can meet our own psychological needs as well as fulfilling our own unique potential. 

Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs

400

An internal state that activates behavior and directs it towards a goal. 

Motivation

400

The part of the hypothalamus that produces hunger signals

Lateral

400

Biological drives that must be satisfied to maintain life

fundamental needs

400

The ability to perceive imagine and understand emotions and use that information in decision making. 

Emotional Intelligence

400

A state of tension produced by a need that motivates an organism toward a goal.

Drive

500

When people are given more extrinsic motivation than necessary to perform a task their motivation declines

Overjustification effect

500

The weight around which your day to day weight tends to fluctuate. 

Set Point

500

David McClelland's photographic tool for measuring achievement motivation, also known as the TAT. 

Thematic Apperception Test

500

According to this theory, when the stimulus for one emotion is removed, you feel the opposite reaction. 

Opponent Process Theory

500

Engaging in activities because they are personally rewarding or because they fulfill our beliefs and expectations. 

Intrinsic Motivation