what are emotions?
combination of physiological and cognitive responses to experiences:
- neural response (amygdala activation, release of cortisol and adrenaline)
- physiological factors (heart racing, nausea)
- subjective feelings (recognition of danger, feeling of fear)
- emotional expression (eyes wide, eyebrows raised, mouth pulled back)
- urge to take action
what is the discrete emotions theory? what evidence supports it?
what are the basic emotions, according to discrete emotions theory?
according to the discrete emotions theory, how do non-basic emotions develop?
how do we study emotions felt by infants?
systems of coding facial cues link particular muscle movements with particular emotions
what are the two general emotional states present at birth?
in what general order do the basic emotions appear?
why do the “terrible twos” exist?
how does fear change with cognitive development?
what are self-conscious emotions? when do they emerge?
how does culture influence experience of self-conscious emotions
how do guilt and shame differ? how are they similar? at what age can they be distinguished from one another?
how do parent’s reactions influence experiences of guilt and shame?
how does emotional recognition emerge in infancy?
what is social referencing?
children’s use of parents’ facial expressions and tone of voice to decide how to deal with novel/ambiguous situations
at what age to children develop a rudimentary ability to identify and label emotions in themselves and others?
3 years - initially label as “feeling good” vs “feeling bad”
at what age do children understand mixed emotions?
5 years
at what age do children begin to understand that a person’s facial expression does not necessarily match what they’re feeling?
5 years (i.e., understand fake emotions)
what are display rules? why is it important for children to come to understand them?
what is co-regulation?
at what age do rudimentary emotion regulation skills emerge? what do they look like?
what are the more complex types of emotional regulation? when do they emerge?
what are the benefits of good emotion regulation skills?
how do adolescents’ experience of emotions differ from that of adults?