2. Importance of the Unconscious. – Dynamic processes. – Intrapsychic Conflict (
Id, Ego, Superego). 3. Defense Mechanisms. 4. Importance of early childhood ...
1. Psych 305A: Lecture 9. The Self (part I). 2. Carl Rogers. • People are
intrinsically good and striving toward self-understanding, self-acceptance,
maturity, and.
Oct 31, 2010 - Whitney A. Sedgwick is with the Department of Counselling Services, ..... Trzesniewski, & Tracy, 2004; Smith & Ellsworth, 1985; Tangney ...
Dec 8, 2011 - The online version of this article can be found at: DOI: 10.1177/0963721411424739. 2011 20: 395. Current D
May 7, 2012 - sess a small repertoire of pan-cultural nonverbal emotion expres- sions that are reliably ... emotion of pride (e.g., Tracy & Robins, 2004; Tracy & Matsu- moto, 2008 ...... fur Experimentelle Psychologie, 48, 145–160. Bargh, J. A. ....
Science confirms chicks dig bad boys. Dave McGinn. Globe and Mail Blog.
Posted on Tuesday, May 24, 2011 12:00PM EDT. Researchers at the University
of ...
Nov 22, 2011 - coders, αs = .72 (shame), .80 (guilt), .87 (hubristic pride), and .94 ..... the most harm, leading them to hire and fire others in a dis- criminatory ...
Azim F. Shariff and Jessica L. Tracy. What Are Emotion ... by Jessica Tracy on December 8, 2011 ..... Keltner, D., Young
Dovidio: The Sage Handbook of Prejudice, Stereotyping and Discrimination Page: 81 81â96. 5. Evolutionary ...... groups (e.g., Jews, African-Americans). Traits.
Reminder. • Research Assistant Positions available! – Emotion and Self Lab
needs your help! – Email [email protected] for information about
projects ...
University of Wisconsin, Eau Claire. Abstract. Chile was the ... This belief is now endemic throughout the Chilean population. The inequities in .... listing schools for sale, with guaranteed revenues posted to entice any likely buyer. A well-known .
PLANT CLASSIFICATION (Levetin and McMahon, pages 123 – 138). Although
scientific names can be pretty incomprehensible to the layperson they.
Aug 9, 2011 - Birthday'' song at our birthday party. The same event is relevant to multiple concerns, and evokes multiple modes of action readiness* ...
Memory for Time and Place Contributes to Enhanced Confidence in. Memories for .... objective measures of memory recovery, point toward an associ- ation between ...... In addition, we assessed confidence ratings for the flash- bulb memory ...
Oct 24, 2016 - Amanda Markey, Uncommon Schools, Williamsburg Collegiate Charter. School ...... Iso-Ahola, S. E., & Crowley, E. D. (1991). Adolescent ...
Feb 12, 2013 ... Back to Original Article. When Love Hurts. The pain of heartbreak can lead to
physical symptoms and illness, according to psychology research.
ObserverVol. 26, No. 2 February 2013 www.psychologicalscience.org/observer. APS AND PSYCHONOMIC SOCIETY JOIN FORCES a pu
Pp is increased (to draw the cell further into the pipet). • Tc is constant. ... tions
where Lp > Rp. In this way, red cells, like most biological materials, exhibit.
Lecture –17 Structural Biomaterials. Cartilage - A Case Study. Normal healthy
human joints have friction coefficients in the range. (0.001-0.03, lower than teflon
...
Feb 18, 2013... fiber filled with electrostatically tunable liquid crystals. 2/18/2013. ECE 595,
Prof. Bermel. S. Obayya, “Computational Photonics” (Wiley, 2010) ...
Aug 15, 2011 - A.D. received a Ph.D. grant from the Center for Ecological and Evolutionary Studies, University of Groningen. L.K. is grateful for funding from the ...
Evolutionary Perspective on Personality. The key to survival of the species is
living to reproductive age and reproducing! Darwin revolutionized the field of ...
employees of incumbent firms in the same industry. As no consensus in the ... assumed that having genetic similarity with the parent provides the base for ...
Evolutionary Perspective • How do heritable traits get passed on? • Why do humans have some of the traits we have? • Why are men and women different? • Why do humans have individual differences in social behavior and personality? – Weakest point of evolutionary perspective 3
Evolutionary Perspective • We are biologically programmed to engage in behaviors that facilitate survival and reproduction – e.g. eating, sex, fighting enemies, cooperating with friends
• These behaviors maximize the likelihood that our genes will be passed down to the next generation • Natural selection is the process by which adaptive behaviors are selected – People with genes for adaptive behaviors live to pass these genes on
• The result is a human nature that reflects behaviors that have been adaptive throughout evolutionary 4 history
Evolutionary Perspective • To study personality from an evolutionary perspective, think about how personality traits might be adaptive – Does a particular trait increase your likelihood of survival? (Natural Selection) – Does a particular trait increase your likelihood of finding a mate and reproducing? (Sexual Selection) – Does a trait influence the likelihood that your relatives will survive (Inclusive Fitness) 5
Inclusive Fitness • Explains behaviors that seem maladaptive – Altruism, self-sacrifice • Prediction: more altruism toward kin than non-kin • Evidence supports this, at least in self-report
– Other examples of seemingly maladaptive behaviors –which may be partly due to genes-that might benefit our family members?
6
Evidence for the Evolutionary Perspective on Personality • Humans across cultures and non-human primates show similar social behaviors – – – – – – –
Attachment (parent-child & pair bonding) Affiliation, need to belong Coalitions Status hierarchies Competition for resources Emotion expressions Sexual jealousy
• All of these behaviors promote survival and reproduction
7
Evidence for the Evolutionary Perspective on Personality • Human and non-human primates show similar social behaviors – – – – – – –
Attachment (parent-child & pair bonding) Affiliation, Need to belong Coalitions Status hierarchies Competition for resources Emotion expressions Sexual jealousy
• All of these behaviors promote survival and reproduction
8
Evidence for Evolutionary Perspective: Universal Emotions
Surprise
Anger
Disgust
Fear
Happiness
Sadness
9
Why are emotion expressions adaptive? • Send messages that can save lives of sender and receiver (natural selection and inclusive fitness) • Fear – “Don’t attack!”
• Happy – “I’m friendly”
• Sad: – “I need comfort”
• Disgust: – “This food will make you sick”
• Anger: – “I’m going to attack!”
• Surprise – “Look over there!”
10
Are there other universal emotion expressions?
11
12
13
Why would a pride expression be adaptive? • Occurs after success, so may communicate success to others – “I’m a successful person who deserves high status”
14
Pride Recognition Forced-Choice Test
“Circle the emotion that best matches the emotion expressed by the person in the photo”: Surprise
Pride
Happiness
No emotion 15
Pride Recognition Open-Ended Test
“Which emotion is being expressed in this photo?” ____________________
16
Manipulating Components of the Expression
17
The Pride Expression
89% Pride Recognition 18
Why is it adaptive for pride to look like this? • Head and neck tilted slightly back – Look above others – Approach oriented
• Expanded posture – Dominance – Draws attention
• Slight smile – Social cohesion – Individual remains within the group 19
But, is pride universal?
• Ekman and colleagues (1969) – Studied isolated Fore tribe in Papua New Guinea
• Need to study pride in isolated culture 20
Is Pride Universal?
Burkina Faso 21
Burkina Faso Study Subsistence farmers Most practice
traditional religions
22
Burkina Faso Study Illiterate No education Unable to speak French
(national language)
23
George W. Bush: 0%
Tom Cruise: 0%
Tony Blair: 0%
24
Michael Jordan: 0%
David Beckham: 0%
President Campore: 69%
Thomas Sankara: 51% 25
Burkina Faso Study
Selon vous, laquelle des émotion la personne avait quand la photo a été prise? Choisissez une émotion seulement. [cocher une réponse] Colère
Dégoût Peur
Surpris
Avoir Honte
Content
Autre emotion:______
Fier
Triste
26 Je ne sais pas
Could they recognize pride?
27
Pride Recognition Mean Recognition Rate
80% 60%
57%
40% 20% Chance
0% 28
Pride Recognition is Comparable to Other Emotions 100% 80% 60%
88%
62%
57% 48%
40%
47% 34%
33%
20% 0%
Chance Happy Surprise Pride
Sad
Disgust Anger
Fear
29
But, recognition was lower than in Western cultures • Complicated procedure – Difficulty of translation – Illiterate participants must remember response options – Novelty of task
• Previous research on preliterate cultures – Very low recognition rates: 30-50% in some samples 30
Next Class • Evolutionary Approach Part 2 • Chapter 12 (Cognitive Approach) will NOT be on Exam 4! • Exam 4 on FRIDAY