8.5 KEY TERMS

Match each of the terms on the left with its definition on the right. Click on the term first and then click on the matching definition. As you match them correctly they will move to the bottom of the activity.

Question

emotion
James-Lange theory
Cannon-Bard theory
two-factor theory
appraisal
emotion regulation
reappraisal
emotional expression
universality hypothesis
facial feedback hypothesis
display rule
motivation
drive
bulimia nervosa
anorexia nervosa
metabolism
intrinsic motivation
extrinsic motivation
conscious motivation
unconscious motivation
need for achievement
approach motivation
avoidance motivation
terror management theory
Emotional expressions have the same meaning for everyone.
The strategies people use to influence their own emotional experience.
An eating disorder characterized by an intense fear of being fat and severe restriction of food intake.
A motivation to take actions that lead to reward.
Motivations of which people are not aware.
A positive or negative experience that is associated with a particular pattern of physiological activity.
An evaluation of the emotion-relevant aspects of a stimulus.
The theory that a stimulus triggers activity in the body, which in turn produces an emotional experience in the brain.
An observable sign of an emotional state.
A motivation to experience a positive outcome.
An internal state that signals a physiological need.
Changing one's emotional experience by changing the way one thinks about the emotion-eliciting stimulus.
Emotional expressions can cause the emotional experiences they signify.
The rate at which energy is used by the body.
A motivation to take actions that are themselves rewarding.
A norm for the appropriate expression of emotion.
Motivations of which people are aware.
A motivation not to experience a negative outcome.
The motivation to solve worthwhile problems.
A theory about how people respond to knowledge of their own mortality.
The theory that emotions are based on inferences about the causes of physiological arousal.
The purpose for or psychological cause of an action.
The theory that a stimulus simultaneously triggers activity in the body and emotional experience in the brain.
An eating disorder characterized by binge eating followed by purging.
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