Motivation and emotion/Lectures/Individual emotions

Lecture 09: Individual emotions
This is the ninth lecture for the motivation and emotion unit of study.

Overview

This lecture discusses 20 specific emotions

Take-home messages:

  • Emotions are purposeful—they guide action tendencies towards adaptive functional response
  • Learning about the causes, functions, and consequences of individual emotions expands emotion knowledge and makes adaptive responses to different situations more likely

Outline

  • Basic (7)
    • Fear
    • Anger
    • Disgust
    • Contempt
    • Sadness
    • Interest
    • Joy
    • Self-conscious (5)
    • Shame
    • Guilt
    • Embarrassment
    • Pride
    • Triumph
  • Cognitively complex (8)
    • Envy
    • Gratitude
    • Disappointment
    • Regret
    • Hope
    • Schadenfreude
    • Empathy
    • Compassion

Motivations generated by specific emotions

Typical motivational urges generated (functions served) by specific emotions are shown in Table 1.

Table 1

Motivational Urge Generated by Specific Emotions (based on Reeve (2018, p. 340))

Emotion Motivational urge
Basic
Fear Flee; protect oneself
Anger Overcome obstacles; right an illegitimate wrong
Disgust Reject; get rid of; get away from
Contempt Maintain dominance and social hierarchy
Sadness Repair a loss or failure
Joy Continue goal striving; play; engage in social interaction
Interest Explore; seek; acquire new information; learn
Self-conscious
Shame Restore the self; protect the self
Guilt Make amends
Embarrassment Appease others; communicate blunder was unintended
Pride Authentic: Acquire further skill; persist at challenging tasks

Hubristic: Self-inflation to boost self-esteem and social standing

Triumph Display dominance and power over the defeated
Cognitively complex
Envy Benign: Move up; improve one’s position.

Malicious: Tear down; reduce another's position

Gratitude Act prosocially; grow the relationship
Disappointment Give up; helplessness
Regret Undo a poor decision or behaviour
Hope Keep engaged in pursuit of a desired goal
Schadenfreude Reinforce feelings of superiority
Empathy Act prosocially; help the other
Compassion Reduce suffering

Note. Links go to specific motivation and emotion book chapters. For a table of these emotions with definitions and links to corresponding Wikipedia articles, see the 20 emotions tutorial.

Readings

Slides

See also

Lectures
Tutorial

Recording