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    Gender and Emotions

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    in the way men and women experience emotions. Women are assumed to be far more emotional than men‚ both in experiencing the emotions internally‚ as well as expressing them to the outside world. While the genders may differ in how they express their emotions‚ men and women do not inherently differ in the frequency of emotionality. Men are not emotionless‚ and women do not overcompensate for men’s lack of emotion. The roots of our ideas about gender and emotion date far back. According to Simon and

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    Emotions and Memory

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    senses send our sounds/images to first and it stays there briefly or it is moved to our short term or just lost. In the short term memory‚ the information lasts up to 60 seconds or moved on to our long term memory which can last a lifetime. Therefore‚ emotions take a part on whether the information we receive becomes a long term memory. In the article “Forgetting the Unforgotten Affective Autobiographical Memories in Nonclinical Dissociators” the researchers wanted to find out if a person scores high

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    Emotion Regulation

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    Comparing and Contrasting Views of Emotion Regulation Everyone regulates their emotions and some better than others. A majority of the time we do not even realize we are doing so because of a very powerful unconscious. Emotion regulation is a relatively new section of psychology because it has yet to be extensively researched. Such unexplored areas tend to be even a little fuzzy to even the most understanding of researchers. James J. Gross of Stanford University is one of the comparatively

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    .Basic Emotions

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    basic emotions- Category analysis of emotion words Category analysis of emotion words is theory used to describe emotions; the study explains that words have been created to describe our emotions based on emotional experiences. Certain words such as love or hate can give you a distinct feeling depending on the situation. Johnson-Laird and Oatley conducted a large analysis of 590 English words that we use to express emotion verbally and found that there are numerous ways that our emotions can be

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    Theory of Emotion

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    Theory of Emotion Name Institutional Affiliation Theories of Emotion One of the most outstanding theories of learning in the field of psychology is the cognitive theory. This theory attempts to explain the behavior of human beings through an evaluation and recognition of their thought process. According to cognitive theorists‚ the thoughts of an individual are the single most crucial determinants of the behaviors and emotions of an individual. Consequently‚ these thoughts are responsible for the

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    Theories of emotion

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    Theories of emotion The James-Lange Theory American Psychologist William James and the Danish Psychologist Carl Lange. James-Lange theory holds that physiological response give rise to our cognitive experience of emotion. Our body responds to a perception of an event before we experience the emotion. James-Lange Theory: 1. Event 2. Arousal 3. Emotion Example: The dog is growling; My muscles tense; My heart races; I feel afraid. The Cannon-Bard Thalamic Theory Walter Cannon a psychologist

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    Emotion and Music

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    Jersey‚ “Music can even be used to strengthen or weaken emotions”. People in general completely agree on it! Is music a positive or a negative? It’s a positive‚ because music helps people to cope with our everyday life. Lyrics do affect/relate to people’s life When your feeling down a specific song makes you feel better. As Dr. Reed university of Texas states “many songs‚ genres of music triggers different emotions towards a person.” Music is a positive beneficial toward

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    Emotion and People

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    people who have been blind since birth have similar facial expressions of emotions. This observation suggests that facial expressions are innate‚ since blind people could not have learned these expressions by observing others. 2. We all have emotions. Some emotions are automatic responses like disgust‚ happiness‚ confusion‚ and sadness. All are uncontrollable and universal expressions that humans have. Meaning these emotions look the same on everyone and are uncontrolled responses to some stimulus

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    The Camera and Emotion

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    brings us to the place that they exist emotionally. Scorsese’s films take us into another reality‚ that is to say‚ the reality of his characters. “He is unafraid to use unusual cinematic techniques to thrust us boldly into the characters’ minds and emotions‚” (Thompson‚ & Brodwell‚ 2010). First‚ let’s take a look at Mean Streets. The film opens with a voiceover about sin and the church; Charlie‚ Harvey Keitel’s character‚ wakes up‚ as if from a nightmare‚ and looks in the mirror. Directly after

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    Unreasonable Emotion

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    opened. He even felt frightened when his mum brought him on a taxi. His parents tried to comfort him but he still kept on shouting‚ screaming and crying. He is so uncontrollable that makes his parents really confused. To explain Sam’s unreasonable emotion‚ we can use the concepts of classical conditioning. Before conditioning‚ cable car accident is an unconditioned stimulus (UCS) that produced frightened and impatient feeling and uncontrollable responses like screaming and crying seriously. A closed

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