Motivation and Emotion

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Across
  1. 4. Intense feeling directed at someone or something specifically.
  2. 7. His theory states that a cognitive appraisal is the first step in an emotional response and physiological arousal depends on it.
  3. 8. We are pulled by this type of motivation when we act so as to gain some external reward or to avoid some undesirable consequence.
  4. 9. One of the effective ways to increase work motivation.
  5. 11. One of the basic emotions.
Down
  1. 1. All the processes that initiate, direct, and sustain behavior.
  2. 2. Higher amounts of this hormones lead to emotions like sadness, rage, fear or anxiety, which affects the vulnerability of aggressive behavior in adolescents.
  3. 3. Part of the limbic system that closely associated with fear.
  4. 5. Component of motivation which refers to the focused energy and attention applied in order to achieve the goal.
  5. 6. A state of alertness and mental and physical activation.
  6. 10. His view of motivation suggests that physiological motivations are the foundation for so called higher-level motives.