Motivation: a psychological process that directs and maintains your behavior toward a goal. Motives are the needs, wants, interests, and desires that propel or drive people in certain directions.
- Instinct Theory: we are motivated by our inborn automated behaviors.
- Biological Motives
- Hunger
- Thirst
- Sleep
- Social Motives
- Achievement
- Order
- Play
- Autonomy
- Affiliation
- Drive Theory: Biological internal motivation (homeostasis)
- Incentive Theory: Environmental motivation (not as much homeostasis, more outside factor)
- Drive-Reduction Theory: When individuals experience a need or drive, they're motivated to reduce that need or drive.
Biological Basis of Hunger: Hunger does not come from our stomach. It comes from our brain, they Hypothalamus
- Why do I feel hungry?
- Glucose: the form of sugar that circulates in the blood. Provides the major source of energy for body tissue. Glucose low=hungry, Glucose high=feel full
- Lateral Hypothalamus: when simulated it makes you hungry. When lesioned (destroyed) you will never be hungry again.
- Ventromedial Hypothalamus: when simulated you feel full. When lesioned you will never feel full again.
- Environmental Factors
1. Availability of food
2. Learned preference and habits
3. Stress - Set Point Theory: the hypothalamus acts like a thermostat. Wants to maintain a stable weight. Activate the lateral when you diet and activate the ventromedial when you start to gain weight.
Eating Disorders
- Bulimia Nervosa: characterized by binging (eating large amounts of food) and purging (getting rid of the food).
- Anorexia Nervosa: starve themselves to below 85% of their normal body weight.
- Obesity: severely overweight to the point where it causes health issues.
Achievement Motivation
- Intrinsic Motivators: rewards we get internally, such as enjoyment or satisfaction.
- Extrinsic Motivators: reward that we get for accomplishments from outside ourselves (grades or money or etc.) Work great in the short run.
- Over Justification Effect: promising a reward for doing something you like to do results in you seeking the rewards as the motivation for performing the task.
Management Theory
- Theory X: managers believes that employees will work only if rewarded with benefits or threatened with punishment.
- Theory Y: managers believe that employees are internally motivated to do good work and policies should encourage this internal motive.
Emotion: a response of the whole organism
Physiological arousal
Expressive behaviors
Conscious experience
Physiological arousal
Expressive behaviors
Conscious experience
- James-Lange Theory of Emotion: experience of emotion is awareness of physiological responses to emotion-arousing stimuli.
- Cannon-Bard Theory of Emotion: emotion-arousig stimuli simultaneously trigger:
- physiological responses
- subjective experience of emotion
- Schachter's Two-Factor Theory of Emotion: to experience emotion one must:
- be physically aroused
- cognitively label the arousal
- Emotion-Lie Detectors
- Polygraph: machine commonly used in attempts to detect lies. Measures several of the physiological responses accompanying emotion
- Perspiration
- Cardiovascular
- Breathing changes
- Amygdala: a neural key to fear learning
Experienced Emotion
- Catharsis
- emotional release
- catharsis hypothesis: "releasing" aggressive energy (through action or fantasy) relieves aggressive urges.
- Feel-good, do good phenomenon: people's tendency to be helpful when already in a good mood.
- Adaptation-Level Phenomenon: tendency to form judgements relative to a "neutral" level
- brightness of lights
- volume of sound
- level of income
- Relative Deprivation: perception that one is worse off relative to those with whom one compares oneself.
Do you happen to have any notes about Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs? I understand the concept of it, but I don't know what the needs are.
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