TB9 P&C Overview; Emotion & Cognition
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- Created on: 21-03-16 14:57
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- TB9 P&C Overview; Emption and Cognition
- Lecture 1; Emotion and Perception
- Main ideas and concepts of emotion
- Cognitive components (un/conscious awareness)
- Overt expressions
- Physiological components
- Key brain areas
- Amygdala
- Anterior cingulate cortex
- Insula
- Orbitofrontal cortex
- Ventral striatum
- Main theories
- James-Lange theory (emo bc of body states)
- Cannon-bard theory (emo // body states)
- Main ideas and concepts of emotion
- Lecture 2; Emotion and Attention
- Experimental tasks
- Attentional blink and negative words
- Gabor patches (contrast sensitivity) and emotional stimuli priming
- Emotional Stroop and distractor effects
- Visual search and emotional pop-out
- Word meaning interpretations and mood states
- Dot probe task bias and anxiety
- Neurological evidence
- Subliminal/unattended stimuli activation patterns
- Binocular rivalry tasks
- Visual cortex lesions and blindsight
- Subliminal/unattended stimuli activation patterns
- Experimental tasks
- Lecture 3; Emotion and Learning
- Reinforcers
- Primary
- Secondary
- How a stimulus acquires affective value (emotional significance)
- Emotional Classical conditioning
- Autonomic conditioning
- (unconcious) Evaluative conditioning
- Instrumental conditioning
- Instructional/ observational learning
- Mirror neuron systems
- (unconcious) Emotional mimicry
- Emotional Classical conditioning
- Reinforcers
- Lecture 4; Emotion and Memory
- Arousal and memory
- Yerkes-dodson law
- International affective pictures
- Stress and memory
- Short-term stress
- Panic
- Long-term stress
- Gluco-corticoids
- Animal research
- Human research
- Gluco-corticoids
- PTSD
- Odor and fear
- Short-term stress
- Mood and memory
- State-dependent effects & retrieval
- Selective encoding of mood congruent material
- Mood induction tasks
- Memory for emotional public events
- Positive memory bias
- Arousal and memory
- Tutorial; Body States and emotion, unconscious cues and evaluations
- Lecture 1; Emotion and Perception
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