Warning:
JavaScript is turned OFF. None of the links on this page will work until it is reactivated.
If you need help turning JavaScript On, click here.
This Concept Map, created with IHMC CmapTools, has information related to: Communication of Emotions, Communication of Emtions Emotions: feelings, physiological and cognitive elements that influence behavior. 1. Prepare us: for action: link events in the environment and our responses. 2. Shape: our future behavior: emotions promote learning and help us make appropriate responses. 3. Help us: to interact more effectively with others: we communicate emotions we experience through verbal and non-verbal behaviors. 4. Basic 6: Happiness, Anger, Fear, Surprise, Sadness, Disgust, Communication of Emtions Theories of Emotions James-Lange 1. Phsysiological change precedes emotions. 2. Gut reactions = emotions. 3. Emotional Experience is a reaction to instinctive bodily events that occur as a response to some situation or environment. 4. Stimuli causes physiological changes and thus emotions from the physiological changes., Communication of Emtions Theories of Emotions Cannon-Bard 1. Experience of emotion occurs simultaneously with biological changes. 2. Both physiological arousal and the emotional experience are produced simultaneously by the same nerve stimulus which emanates from the thalamus in the brain. 3. We percieve an amotion-producing stimulus, the thalamus is the initial site of the emotional response - thalamus sends a signal to the autonomic nervous system that produces a visceral response. 4. Physiological reactions because of emotions goes off in your thalamus., 1. Prepare us: for action: link events in the environment and our responses. 2. Shape: our future behavior: emotions promote learning and help us make appropriate responses. 3. Help us: to interact more effectively with others: we communicate emotions we experience through verbal and non-verbal behaviors. 4. Basic 6: Happiness, Anger, Fear, Surprise, Sadness, Disgust ???? Non-Verbal facial expressions, eye contact, vocal cues, tone of voice, gesture, touch, interpersonal distance, speech dysfluencies, posture, gait, appearance., Communication of Emtions Theories of Emotions Schachter-Singer 1. Emphasizes that we identify the emotion we are experiencing by observing our environment and comparing ourselves with others. 2. Emotional experience depends one's own perception. 3. Emotions as labels. 4. Thalamus also communicates a message to the cerebral cortex regarding the nature of the emotion being experienced.