Unit 5 Final (Emotional Theories)

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Across
  1. 4. The part of the brain involved in our behavioural and emotional responses, especially when it comes to behaviours we need for survival
  2. 6. Created by William James and Carl Lange, this theory of emotion arises from the perception of bodily changes.
  3. 8. The theory that our bodily responses affect our emotions (smiling can make you happy, frowning can make you sad)
  4. 9. The theory of emotion that states that our emotions are based on physiological responses that take place in our body.
  5. 11. States that personal meaning is given to stimuli which elicits unique emotions
  6. 13. The physiologist that disagreed with James-Lange theory, believing that physiological responses happened too often and too slowly to cause emotional changes.
  7. 14. A response of the whole organism, involving phsyiological arousal, expressive behaviors, and conscious experience.
Down
  1. 1. The part of the brain responsible for creating responses to stimuli.
  2. 2. The theory of emotion that states that emotions are the result of the interaction between the physiological arousal and the cognitive label we use to respond to stimuli
  3. 3. An involuntary facial emotional response that can be used to better understand our and others' true emotions.
  4. 5. An event or feeling that triggers a phsyiological or emotional reaction
  5. 7. The theory that associates emotions as a means of survival,moving us away from dangerous situations and towards productive situations.
  6. 8. The automatic physiological response that decides whether we face a challenge or run away from it.
  7. 10. The part of your nervous system that is responsible for basic instincts and emotions, oftentimes considered uncontrollable.
  8. 12. the theory that an emotion-arousing stimulus simultaneously triggers phsyiological responses and the subjective experience of emotion