The emotion of anxiety is experienced by the youngest child to the oldest adult. To a healthy degree, anxiety is in fact critical to the learning process. Experiencing and dealing with the discomfort of anxiety allows the child to prepare for and cope with unsettling and often challenging life situations. Research indicates that some individuals experience a more chronic, constant state of anxiety in response to a wide variety of stimuli, whereas others have more infrequent bouts that tend to vary in both frequency and length. Utilizing the character of Kevin Buckman in the film Parenthood, the author examines the young boy’s pervasive sense of anxiety and the ways in which it manifests. Throughout the essay, the author highlights critical factors contributing to Kevin’s anxiety in order to more fully understand the behavior and emotional life of the character. Finally, the paper outlines potential treatment approaches to help alleviate and cope with the anxiety.…
Our emotions are controlled by our limbic system. The limbic system is a group of structures that control our emotions. The structure that make up are limbic system are: amygdala, mammillary body, hippocampus, fornix, cortex of cingulate gyrus, septum, olfactory bulb, and hypothalamus. It is believed that emotions are expressed through the actions of these structures. There are three main theories of emotions. These theories are the Darwin theory, James Lange theory, and the Cannon-Bard theory.…
Raiders of the Lost Ark is a violent, yet well loved film which would be interesting to examine in this light. In Raiders, the choice of perpetrator is our hero, Indiana Jones. We do not think of him as “a perpetrator”, he is “the good guy”, yet he is shown bringing about the demise of many people. Victims of violence can be portrayed as likeable, in which case the effect on the audience is to “increase fear and anxiety. If violence can happen to someone *like* me, it can also happen *to* me, they reason” (Valenti, 101), however, if “the victim is dissimilar to the viewer and NOT likable, the viewer can more easily either rationalize the violence or dismiss it because in some way the victim ‘got what he deserved’” (Valenti, 102). The victims in Raiders are Nazis, not “everyday Joes”, their characters are not individualized, or if they are, they are over-the-top evil, like Arnold Ernst Toht the sadistic and ruthless Nazi Gestapo agent (Raiders).…
Robert Zajonc: Emotions need no inferences; We can have emotional reactions apart from (and even before) we interpret a situation.…
Gavin De Becker’s, The Gift of Fear, is a very intriguing, thought-provoking book that attracts attention from all walks of life. The theme behind this well-written paperback is the importance of listening to your instincts when it comes time to consider fear and violence. De Becker’s background was security issues, which primarily was for the government, large corporations and working for celebrities where he provided insight on the innate survival skills that help protect us from violent crimes. He has had an extremely keen method of educating everyone to use our “gut feelings” to help us through difficult violent occurrences. The evocative account the examples that he provides throughout his literature are not only the key to survival in…
An individual can become fearful of something unusual that may come into mind. In the essay “Dumpster Diving,” Lars Eighner states, “But my strongest reservation about going through individual garbage cans is that this seems to me a very personal kind of invasion to which I would be object if I were a householder” (723). Lars worried when the thought crossed his mind of what could possibly happen to him if he were to go through an individual garbage can. When anyone’s safety is in danger, we all have the instinct to not do anything that does not include our own personal safety. In the essay “Thirty Eight Who Saw Murder Didn’t Call the Police,” Martin Gansberg tells the reader, “A husband and wife both said; Frankly we were afraid” (122). The couple has shown apathy towards the situation because they did not want themselves to get hurt by helping out somebody else.…
The Limbic System about emotions proposed that emotional expression is controlled by several interconnected nuclei and tracts that ring the thalamas. It would appear that this considered to be the primary responsible for our emotional life and has a great deal to do with the formation of memories. There are some though that have suggested that the concept of a functionally unified system should be abandoned because it is grounded mainly in historical concepts of brain autonomy that are no longer accepted as…
I met my grandson for the first time on May 10, 2007. I was standing there in the examining room looking at the monitor screen and looking at my grandson. I could see him moving from side to side and up and down. It was the most marvelous thing anyone can witness in his or her lifetime.…
The most single important piece of knowledge I have gained in English class this year was the fact that if you work hard enough and put effort into your work, in the end, it will result in good things further ahead in the future. My level of effort on my assignment this year so far has been not so great than what I wanted it to be. I can say that it’s due to the fact that I am partially lazy and I may not find the topic so interesting but either way, one has to do the work and you might as well enjoy it. I didn’t actually do my best quality work. I who have like to try, but sadly I did not. My best moments I have had in class was when we all read “One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest” and when we watched the movie version of the…
Bibliography: Cacioppo, J. T., & Gardner, W. L. (1999). Emotion. Annual Review of Psychology, 50, 191-214.…
Cheating is quite common and the reasons are multiple. For this critical thinking paper, the topic I choose is Infidelity. I read an article called "Psychology of Infidelity: Why men and women cheat" by John Benson. This article was broken down into a few parts.Dr. Ley stated that men and women have a different outlook on cheating. A women tends to cheat more along the lines of a romance novel where she feels a lot of intimate attention and excitement. Men on the other hand cheat to get away. They are more likely to have one night stands then a long term secret relationship. They tend to want someone younger and want to feel that kind of escape. This article also talked a lot about how personality traits can be tied into infidelity. David Schmidt, psychologist at Bradley University, told Jay Dixit of Psychology Today, there are five personality factors and each has a different likelihood to cheat. Extroversion was the first trait. Extroverts are driven by sexual desires and seek pleasure. They tend to look for situations to satisfy their needs. Emotional Stability was another trait. People who are emotionally stable are less likely to wander off and cheat on their spouse. The third one was openness. Those who are open to trying new things might be more likely to cheat. Also, people who disregard other people's feelings and opinions might also be more likely to become unfaithful. The last one was conscientiousness. Those who struggle to control impulses and whose morals might not be structured usually are cheaters. This article gives you examples of what happens once an affair is out on the open. The person that cheated is often left feeling guilty and the person cheated on feels betrayal, anger and sadness. Surviving infidelity was the last topic in the article. Most relationships that give it another try after finding out that their partner was unfaithful, don't work out. There's always that lack of trust there. The relationships that do work out usually go…
In the film adaptation of Ken Kesey’s novel, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Pat McMurphy (played by Jack Nicholson) is convicted of statutory rape and sentenced to a short prison sentence. No stranger to prison, however, McMurphy or “Mac” decides to fake a mental-illness and be committed to a mental hospital in order to avoid the harsh conditions of prison. While in the mental hospital, Nicholson’s character begins to befriend his fellow mentally ill patients and, in doing so, inspires them to achieve greater things in their lives. However, Mac’s time in the mental institute is not without its’ challenges, such as the stern faced Nurse Ratched who opposes how Mac brings inspiration to the other patients, which she sees as rebellion to her authority (Forman, 1975). During the movie, Mac and other patients exhibit key psychological principles that explain the causes of their behavior. These principles seen throughout the movie include psychotic disorders, examples of Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs, and theories of morality.…
The researchers in this experiment aimed to “Investigate the quantitative differentiation of pulmonary dendritic cells in smoker with or without chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder (COPD) to explore the possible role of dendritic cells in smokers suffering COPD” (Yan-wei, Yong-jiang, & Xian-sheng, 2010). Dendritic cells (DCs) are inflammatory cells that are considered to be the promoter of immune responses; knowing this the researchers hypothesized that DCs may play an important role in the development of the disease. Subjects were broken into three groups based on an illness gradient: (control group, smokers without airflow obstruction, and COPD group as determined by the Chinese Society of Respiratory Disease). Samples of alveolar tissue were taken from these three groups and studied using immunohistochemical staining and immunofluorescence confocal laser scanning. The results from the experiment are portrayed using a one-way analysis of variance, Pearson’s r coefficient, graphs, and scatter plots. The conclusion of the data showed that “The quantity of the DCs significantly increased in smokers with COPD compared with non-smokers or smokers without COPD” (Yan-wei et al., 2010).…
Human Resource Management Project on Performance and Appraisals Index |Sr. No. |Content |Page No. | |1. |History of BMW |3 | |2.…
Under Poe’s Pen, readers can find breath-taking beauties, most attractive sceneries and serviceable romantic images. Reading Poe’s works is a way to enjoy beauty as well as to bear the torture of great lose and ghostly horror because the shadow of death almost penetrates all of these described beauties. Dreamlike sceneries appeared in his work here and there too. Poe’s writing style has made him be a controversial figure in the literature field for many years. What Poe wrote down is not only the reflection of the real-world objects but also imaging ones that were only existed in Poe’s mental world. This essay will use the Topographic Model of Freud’s psychoanalytic approach to analyze Poe’s poem The Raven and help reader to learn more clearly about the poem.…