M
C
Q
s
D
r
i
v
e
A
Adrenaline
B
Amines.
C
Cortisone
D
Endrophins.
A
Pursed lips.
B
Smiling.
C
Sticking out your tongue.
D
Raising your eyebrows.
A
Attribution
B
Emotional expression
C
Physiologiacl arousal
D
Vocal modulation
A
Body language.
B
Emotional expression.
C
Arousal during emotional states.
D
Emotional expression in animals and humans.
A
Emotion occurs when the thalamus sends signals stimultaneously to the cortex and to the autonomic nervous system
B
Emotions develop because of their adaptive value
C
Different patterns of autonomic activation lead to the experience of different emotions
D
The experience of emotion depends on autonomic arousal and your cognitive interpretation of that arousal
A
Experiencing different unique secondary emotions
B
Experiencing different intensities of the same primary notion
C
Experiencing different unique primary emotions
D
Each labelling their emotions differently due to difference in genetic disposition
A
The inability to cope with stress effectively
B
Being caught between two incompatible motives
C
Being expected to live up to high standard of performance
D
Being blocked in the pursuit of a desire goal
A
Appraisal, perception, bodily changes, emotions, actions
B
Perception, bodily changes, appraisal, emotions, actions
C
Perception, appraisal, bodily changes, emotions, actions
D
Bodily changes, perception, emotions, actions, appraisal.
A
Exhaustion
B
Stress appraisal
C
Resistance
D
Adjustment
A
Relative deprivation principle.
B
Guilty knowledge test
C
Adaptation-level phenomenon
D
Two-factor theory