Across
- 1. – Coping aimed at regulating emotional responses to stress.
- 8. – Technique using monitoring devices to control physiological processes.
- 9. – Performing a behavior to earn rewards or avoid punishment.
- 10. – The drive to excel, succeed, or reach a standard of excellence.
- 12. – A biological or psychological requirement for well-being.
- 13. – The highest level of Maslow’s hierarchy, realizing one’s full potential.
- 15. – Study of how psychological factors affect health, illness, and treatment.
- 17. – Response to perceived challenges or threats that disrupt homeostasis.
- 18. – Maslow’s pyramid model of human needs from basic to self-actualization.
- 19. – Two-factor theory that emotion results from arousal plus cognitive interpretation.
- 20. – Efforts to manage stress and its emotional consequences.
Down
- 2. – Coping aimed at addressing the source of stress directly.
- 3. – Performing an activity for its inherent satisfaction rather than external reward.
- 4. – Theory that facial expressions can influence emotional experience.
- 5. – Complex reactions that include physiological arousal, expressive behaviors, and conscious experience.
- 6. – A psychological state that motivates an organism to satisfy a need.
- 7. – Theory that emotions and physiological arousal occur simultaneously.
- 11. – Theory that emotions arise from physiological arousal.
- 14. – The internal processes that initiate, direct, and sustain behavior.
- 16. – Ability to recover quickly from stress or adversity.
