Chapter 12: Emotional Behaviors

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Stress Response in Humans James J. Messina, Ph.D..
Advertisements

Chapter 13—Stress, Health, and Coping
Chapter 12 Emotional Behaviors. What is Emotion? An emotional state has three aspects: 1.Cognition 2.Readiness for action 3.Feeling.
Copyright © 2006 by Allyn and Bacon Chapter 17 Biopsychology of Emotion, Stress, and Health Fear, the Dark Side of Emotion This multimedia product and.
Psychoneuroimmunology Epi 6181, University of Ottawa Monika Goetz Monday March 9 th,
The Nervous and Endocrine Systems. What is the Nervous System? Body’s electrochemical communication system ◦ How your brain communicates with limbs, organs,
Psychoneuroimmunology Updated by Dr: Mohamed Adel El-Hadidy Definition: Psychoneuroimmunology is the field concerned with relationships among the mind.
Chapter 3 Managing Stress: Restoring Mind–Body Harmony
Emotion, Stress & Health Mind and Body ► Can the body affect the mind? ► Example? ► How about the mind affecting the body? ► Example? ► Two-way communication.
Emotion, Stress & Health
EMOTIONS STRESS & HEALTH. DEFINING EMOTIONS  Emotions constitute multiple responses –Behavioral (Actions) –Autonomic (Physiological) –Hormonal (Physiological)
DO NOW  Prepare your reading notes to be checked (EVERYONE).  Then, briefly describe the three types of Industrial/Organizational Psychology.
The Physiology of Stress Chapter 2
Copyright © 2009 Allyn & Bacon Chapter 17 Biopsychology of Stress and Health.
Emotions, Stress & Health Michelle McBride Graduate Assistant CCSU Psychology Dept.
Ch. 15 Stress and Health McElhaney. Ch 15 Key Topics ► 1. Big Picture definition and significance of stress- ► 2. Health – ► Behavior Health Risks ► Risk.
Chapter 12 Emotional Behaviors. What is Emotion? An emotional state has three aspects: 1.Cognition 2.Readiness for action 3.Feeling.
1 Stress and Disease Chapter 10. Mosby items and derived items © 2006 by Mosby, Inc. 2 Stress  A person experiences stress when a demand exceeds a person’s.
Physical Disorders and Health Psychology Chapter seven.
PhD MD MBBS Faculty of Medicine Al Maarefa Colleges of Science & Technology Faculty of Medicine Al Maarefa Colleges of Science & Technology Lecture – 11:
Chapter 12 Emotional Behaviors
Stress and Health (and the brain) Is stress a good thing?
Protective and Damaging Effects of Stress Mediators (Stress and the Immune System) Chapter Four Caitlin Cleary June 13, 2007
Stress Link of complete overview News reader idea?
Chapter 7: Stress and Coping Chapter themes covered: What causes stress? Illness as a source of stress; Stress as a cause of illness; What are different.
What is Stress? Going for the 3 Increases: Increase in Health, Increase in Happiness & Increase in Energy Strategies for Success in Health Management By:
Stress & Health The interplay between mind, body and disease.
The Immune System Bryce Tappan. Function of the Immune System The purpose of the immune system is to protect an organism from external dangers such as.
Emotion and Motivation. Pleasure, elation, ecstasy, sadness, depression, fear, anger and calm imbue our action with passion and character Emotion, like.
Chapter 13: Health and Stress. What exactly is Substance Abuse? 1. How would you describe it? In other words, how is abuse different from use? 2. Psychologist.
 emotional facial expressions ◦ evolutionary explanation.
Chapter 13 Your Body Systems Lesson 6 Your Immune System.
Section 18: Health and Well-Being Psychology in Modules by Saul Kassin.
Functions of Hormones in Human Behavior IB Psychology From Levels of Analysis in Psychology.
Dr. YASER ALHUTHAIL Associate Professor & Consultant Consultation Liaison Psychiatry.
PSK171 STRESS MANAGEMENT Controlling Stress & Tension Girdano, Dusek & Everly Chapter 2 Systems that control stress arousal.
College Board - “Acorn Book” Course Description 7-9% Unit VIII. Motivation and Emotion1.
Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 How and Why Do We Experience Stress? The human stress response to perceived threat activates thoughts, feelings, behaviors,
6-8% (previously 7-9% ) 1. Source: New Yorker Magazine.
Chapter 8 Stress and Disease. Historical Walter Cannon – 1914 Stress – physiologic & psychologic state Hans Selye – 1946 Stress – biologic phenomenon.
Psychology, 4/e by Saul Kassin
Stress and Health Chapter 12. Effects of Stress Health Psychology A subfield of psychology that focuses on how stress affects our well being and our.
Chapter 12 The Biology of Emotion and Stress. Stress Stressor - An event that either strains or overwhelms the ability of an organism to adjust to the.
Fig101. Fig11_3 Fig103 In R ev 11 a THEORIES IN MOTIVATION Innate biological instincts guide behavior. Behavior is guided by biological needs and learned.
The Biological Bases of Behavior Chapter Neurons: The Building Blocks of the Nervous System Module 6: The Nervous System and the Endocrine System.
Emotion. Emotions- complex pattern of changes including physiological, cognitive, and behavioral reactions, in response to a situation.
Stress and Disease Chapter 10 Mosby items and derived items © 2010, 2006 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc.
Emotion, Stress and Health
Emotion and Motivation Zara Melikyan, Ph.D. Fall 2015.
Unit 8B: Motivation and Emotion: Emotions, Stress and Health.
Unit 8B: Motivation and Emotion: Emotions, Stress and Health.
Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Mind-Body Interactions: Physical & Psychological Contributions to Health HW 280 Unit 8 Seminar.
Myers PSYCHOLOGY Seventh Edition in Modules Module 39 Stress and Illness James A. McCubbin, Ph.D. Clemson University Worth Publishers.
Updated PowerPoint for B day classes
Section 2: Reactions to Stress.   Body reacts quickly to stressor  Adrenal glands produce:  Hormones that increase blood sugar for energy  Adrenaline-
Short-term and Long-term responses.  An important adaptation  Prepares us to take action that is evolutionarily important  Keep from being eaten 
Use with Atkinson & Hilgard’s Introduction to Psychology 15 th edition Nolen-Hoeksema, Fredrickson, Loftus, Wagenaar ISBN © 2009 Cengage.
Chapter 13 Psychology and Health. Module 13.1 Stress: What It Is and What It Does to the Body.
Stress & Health. Brainstorm…. List all the different stressors that you encounter in a regular school day.
Stress & Health. Brainstorm…. List all the different stressors that you encounter in a regular school day.
1 Stress and Disease Chapter 10. Mosby items and derived items © 2006 by Mosby, Inc. 2 Stress  A person experiences stress when a demand exceeds a person’s.
Behavior and its Functional Supply
Chapter 2 - Stress 1) Define stress and how the human body adapts to stress (physiologically, mentally, and emotionally). 2) Explain how stress can increase.
Chapter 24 The Immune System.
Stress and Disease Chapter 8.
STRESS.
Vocab 8b.
Psychoneuroimmunology
Module 44: Stress and Illness
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 12: Emotional Behaviors Module 12.1: What is emotion anyway? Module 12.2: Stress & Health Module 12.3: Attack & Escape Behaviors

Introduction Defining Emotions Consciousness & Emotion subjective behavioral physiological Consciousness & Emotion cannot be unconscious and experience emotion absence seizures emotion can be caused by unconscious influences Tranel & Demasio, 1993

Usefulness of Emotions Assist in decision making Prefrontal cortex damage lose their emotions and their decision making suffers affective feedback gone (“feeling good, bad about consequences” anticipation of consequences reduced morality Emotions and readiness behavior Emotions and increased motivation Emotions start the fight-or-flight response sympathetic activation parasympathetic activation

Theories of Emotions/Emotional Arousal James-Lange theory- (note: text description is incorrect) primacy of autonomic arousal (and skeletal actions) in emotional identification Cannon-Bard theory- a stimulus evokes the emotional experience and the physical arousal simultaneously but independently Schacter-Singer theory- the physiological changes tell you how strong your emotion is, but need some contextual or cognitive cue to identify which emotion being felt. Primacy of cognition and importance of environment Support for J-L Theory- facial feeback hypothesis (Ekman) Spinal Cord Patients (Hohmann) Locked-in syndrome

Pathways of the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems Stress and Health Behavioral Medicine stress, personality, experience in health and disease processess Stress-the nonspecific response of the body to any demand made upon it (Selye). Physiological based definition (there are others) Stress Activates Autonomic Nervous system (nervous) HPAC System (hormonal) Pathways of the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems

Evidence of Mind-Body Interactions Psychosomatic Illness Onset of illness due to someone’s personality, emotions, or experiences Ulcers Ulcers can be formed when an individual experiences a great deal of stress effect on digestive system (saliva secretion, HCL secretion, peristaltic action) Control of the stress can alter ulcer formation yoked pairs, executive monkey research, predictability & control Ulcers are formed when the parasympathetic nervous system rebounds after the stress post stress rebound effects heliobactor pylori

Evidence of Mind-Body Interactions Heart Disease Data may indicate that people who experience frequent hostility are more prone to heart disease Voodoo Death Richter found that voodoo death may be due to parasympathetic rebound

Stress Activation in the Body HPA Axis (hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal) Slower to respond Important in chronic stress Activation of hypothalamus causes release of ACTH from pituitary and release of cortisol from adrenal Cortisol mobilizes resources but can be harmful if prolonged exposure Autonomic Nervous System Rapid Response System Important in more Acute Stressors Results in activation of Sympathetic Nervous System

The hypothalamus-anterior pituitary-adrenal cortex axis Prolonged stress leads to the secretion of the adrenal hormone cortisol, which elevates blood sugar and increases metabolism. These changes help the body sustain prolonged activity but at the expense of decreased immune system activity.

Immune System Cells Consists of cells that protect the body against invaders like bacteria and viruses Leukocytes White Blood Cells Patrol blood and other body fluids for invaders Identifies antigens on intruders and signal attack from immune system Macrophage Surrounds intruder, digests it, and exposes its antigens on its own surface

More Immune System Cells B Cell attaches to an intruder and produces specific antibodies to attack the intruder’s antigen antibodies are Y-shaped proteins that circulate in the blood, specifically attaching to one kind of antigen T Cell Cytotoxic-directly attack intruder cells Helper-stimulate other T cells or B cells to multiply more rapidly Natural Killer Cells blood cells that attach to certain kinds of tumor cells and cells infected with viruses

More Immune System Cells/Products Cytokines Chemicals released by the immune system that attack infections and also communicate with the brain to elicit anti-illness behaviors Fevers make the body a lest hospitable host sleepiness, decreased muscle activity, decreased sex drive conserve energy decreased appetite may deprive body of iron needed by viruses

Immune system responses to a bacterial infection A macrophage cell engulfs a bacterial cell and displays one of the bacteria’s antigens on its surface. Meanwhile a B cell also binds to the bacteria and produces antibodies against the bacteria. A helper T cell attaches to both the macrophage and the B cell; it stimulates the B cell to generate copies of itself, called B memory cells, which immunize the body against future invasions by the same kind of bacteria.

Stress Effects on the Immune System Short-term stress acts to increase immune system function Long-term stress decreases immune system function Reduced levels of natural killer cells, B cells, and T cells Reduced T cell function Reduced NK cell function Reduced resistance to infection

Stress Effects on the Brain Selective cell death to hippocampal cells Due to high cortisol levels damage to hippocampus can lead to an increase in cortisol levels; creating a vicious cycle of cell death and high cortisol levels Aged people with high cortisol levels show the greatest deterioration of the hippocampus and resulting memory impairment

Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Who is Affected? People who have had a traumatic experience of being severely injured or threatened people who have seen other people harmed or killed What are the Symptoms? Frequent flashbacks and nightmares about the event avoidance of reminders of the event exaggerated arousal in response to noises and other stimuli

Attack Behaviors Affective Attack highly emotional attack behavior triggered by pain or threat or when primed Heredity and Environment in Human Violence Evidence for a genetic or prenatal environment component Children exposed to families experiencing discord, depression, substance abuse or legal problems are more likely to demonstrate aggressive behaviors

Physiology of Aggression Hormones High levels of testosterone are associated with aggression Serotonin low serotonin turnover is associated with increased aggression Temporal Lobe Stimulation of ventromedial hypothalamus or amygdala can result in aggression

Location of amygdala in the human brain The amygdala, located in the interior of the temporal lobe, receives input from many cortical and subcortical areas. Part (a) shows a blow-up of separate nuclei of the amygdala.

Escape Behaviors Two Types Fear-transient Anxiety-can be long lasting Brain Mechanisms Associated with excitation of amygdala Most likely associated with GABA pathways Anti-anxiety drugs decrease fear and anxiety by facilitating inhibition at GABA synapses

The GABAA receptor complex Of its four receptor sites sensitive to GABA, the three a sites are also sensitive to benzodiazepines.