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Hi, my name is Brian Collin. And today's topic is on the theories of emotion.
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To begin this discussion,
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let's assume that you were camping with a
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friend and a bear stumbles upon your campsite.
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You are afraid for your life that the bear might attack you.
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The James Lange theory argues that you first noticed the stimulus, which
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in your case would be seeing a bear at your campsite.
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Then because you see it, the bear at your campsite,
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you start having physiological responses.
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Your heart starts beating really fast and you start sweating.
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So, because you are sweating and your heart starts beating quickly,
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you realize that you are scared.
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The James Lange theory argues that emotions such as feeling fear
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are a result of how your body responds to a stimulus.
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So, in essence,
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it's saying that you feel fear because you
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start sweating and your heart starts beating fast.
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Do you really think that you feel fear because your
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heart starts beating fast or because you start sweating?
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So, if you're playing a sport and have the same physiological response,
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does that mean you're going to experience fear?
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Maybe, maybe not.
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Which is why the James Lang theory is not
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one of the more accepted theories on emotions.
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The Canon-Bard theory argues that you first see the stimulus or notice the stimulus.
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So, in your case would be seeing a bear at your campsite.
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Then you experience the physiological response such
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as sweating and your heart beating rapidly.
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At the same exact time, you also experience the emotion.
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So, in your case, at the campsite, the emotion would be feeling fear.
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So, the Cannon-Bard theory argues that you experience the
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physiological response and the emotion at the same time.
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Unlike the James-Lange theory,
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the Cannon-Bard theory does not indicate that you feel an emotion
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because you have a physiological response.
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Do you agree with the Canon-Bard theory? Why or why not?
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The Schachter-Singer theory argues that you first see the stimulus.
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So, in your case would be seeing a bear at your campsite.
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Then you have your physiological response.
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So, your heart starts beating fast and you start sweating.
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Schachter-Singer argued that at the same time as your physiological response,
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you would appraise the situation,
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which meant identifying the stimulus and understanding why
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it has led you to feel that emotion.
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So, in your example,
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there is a bear at my campsite that could
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attack me or hurt me and therefore I'm scared.
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So, as a result of both your physiological
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response and your cognitive appraisal of the situation,
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you experience the emotion, which in your case would be fear.
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So, what do you think about the
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Schachter-Singer theory?
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Do you think it's a better or worse theory than the Cannon-Bard or James-Lange theory?
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The Lazarus's Cognitive Mediational Theory argues that
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you first see the stimulus. So, in your case would be seeing a bear at your campsite.
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Then you have a cognitive appraisal of the situation
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and understand why it may cause a particular emotion.
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So, in your case, you might think there's a bear that could attack or hurt me,
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therefore I'm scared.
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Then because you appraise the situation,
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you feel the emotion.
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So, essentially because you recognize that the bear is present and is a threat to you,
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you experience the emotion of fear.
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Then, as a result of you experiencing the motion,
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you have a physical response.
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So, in your case, because you feel fear,
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your heart starts beating quickly and you start sweating.
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So, what do you think of Lazarus's Cognitive Mediational Theory?
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Do you think it's better than the others? Why or why not?
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So, let's review.
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The James-Lange theory of emotion suggests that emotions
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are caused by physiological responses to a stressor.
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The Canon-Bard theory of emotion suggests
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that you respond emotionally to a stressor,
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at the same time, the physiological changes in your body happen.
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The Schachter-Singer theory argues that after responding to a stressor,
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you appraise the threat at the same time
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as changes happen in your body such as sweating
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and increased heart rate, which leads you to feel the emotion.
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Lazarus's cognitive mediational theory argues that
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after being exposed to a stressor,
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you appraise the threat, then you feel the emotion,
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and then because you feel the emotion,
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you have a physiological response such as increased heart rate and sweating.
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Thank you for watching this video.
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