5 / six questions
Let's get biological
Overthinking It (Cognitive aspects)
Back to basic (emotions)
Self-conscious complex emotions
100

The component of emotion that gives it its communicative aspect.

expressive

100

The facial expression of emotion described by the following: nasalis wrinkles the nose; zygomaticus raises the cheeks; orbicularis oris raises the upper lip

disgust

100

The number of different emotions a person can distinguish within his or her own experience is called

emotion knowledge.

100

This is potentially the most dangerous emotion, as its functional purpose is to destroy barriers in one's environment

anger

100

An emotion expressed with a slight (not a large) smile, tilting the head slightly back, expanding the chest, and raising one’s arms upward into the air.

pride

200

A concept that states cognitions do not directly cause emotions any more than biological events do.

Plutchik's chicken-and-egg analysis

200

the most difficult emption for people to recognize from the facial expression alone

fear

200

The number of emotions according to cognitive theorists

an (almost) limitless number

200

The emotion that has the effect of broadening our attention, thoughts, and behaviors.

joy

200

Mimicry, in which one’s own facial expression, voice tone, and posture mirrors that of the other person, seems to trigger

empathy

300

feelings, bodily responses, sense of purpose, expressive behaviors

the four components of emotion

300

The textbooks conclusion on whether the biological or cognitive views of emotion are correct.

both views are correct, but they emphasize different aspects of the emotion process.

300

The concept/term that best describes what happens when we think, "Is this event a personal threat?"

Lazarus’s concept of primary appraisal

300

The emotion that involves a negative evaluation of the other person’s behavior; typically the other person is judged to be unworthy in some way. It only arises during social interaction.

contempt

300

The phrase “I took action, it turned out bad, and now I wish that I had acted differently” sums up which of the following emotions?

regret

400

Moods function mostly to bias cognitions and what the person thinks about unlike

emotions

400

Which theory described the experience, "I see a dog, my heart races, I feel fear."

the James-Lange theory of emotion

400

The aspect of social sharing of emotion that is closest to a type of therapy in terms of helping the person best alleviate emotional distress and cope better with the emotional situation.

cognitive sharing

400

The emotion that arises primarily from experiences of separation and failure.

sadness or distress

400

An emotion that generates a pulling-down motivation, although it too is aimed at improving one’s position.

malicious envy

500

The emotion regulation strategy used when facing a threatening or boring situation and a person starts to think of something else.

attentional focus

500

The version of the facial feedback hypothesis that suggests the contribution of facial feedback to emotional experience is small relative to that of other factors.

the weak version

500

Lazarus's view of emotion added to Arnold's

the idea that each discrete emotion involves its own unique appraisal

500

Rumination is the catalyst that, when combined with other negative emotions, produces emotion overproduction that can lead to

depression

500

An emotion that is both a positive and a negative emotion

Compassion