Fall 2022
Lectures
- Lecture I introduction to psychology of motivation
- Lecture II research
- Lecture III history
- Lecture IV brain and behavior
- Lecture V physiological needs I
- Lecture VI physiological needs II
- Lecture VI motives and reinforcement
- Lecture VII psychological needs
- Lecture VIII Maslow’s needs
- Lexture IX Implicit motives
- Lecture X Is there a deep structure to human dynamics?
- Lecture XI uncounscious motivation
- Lecture XII plans, goals, values
- Lecture XIII implementing a plan
- Lecture XIV mindsets
- Lecture XV cognitive dissonance therory
- Lecture XVI personal control beliefs
- Lecture XVII Emotions I
- Lecture XVIII Emotions II
- Lecture XIX Emotions III Panksepp and Feldman-Barrett
- Lecture XX specific and complex emotions
- Lexture XXII growth and holistic motivational theories
- Lecture XXIIII Positive Psychology and motivation
Regarding our class activities
You will be asked to engage in a number of in-class and between-class assignments regarding your ideas, thoughts, feelings, reactions, beliefs regarding the topics we will be considering in our class.
Some of this material might be of a personal nature. Since these activities are a class requirement (They generate points that affect your grade) and since I (and the G.A.) will be looking at your responses: we (you and I) will have this understanding–you may lie in your responses. Feel free to make up, omit, confabulate, or distort any personal information to you would find embarrassing, distressful to discuss, or for any reason do not wish to share. You can be truthful at some points and not at others–only you will know. You can alter any details you relate of your life, history, feelings, attitudes, or behavior. In general you might wish to do this little and selectively–many of the assignments may more productive if you are using genuine information–but it is entirely up to you. I will not know and have no need to know: the purpose of these activities is usually served in the process, not the content.
References
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Class activity:
Davidson, R.J. & Begley, S. (2012). The emotional life of your brain: How its unique patternsaffect the way you think, feel, and live- and how you can change them. New York, NY: Avery.
Davis, K. L., & Montag, C. (2019). Selected principles of Pankseppian affective neuroscience. Frontiers in Psychology, 12(1025), 1-11.
Davis, K. L., & Panksepp, J. (2018). The emotional foundations of personality: A neurobiological and evoluntary approach.New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Co.
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DeSerisy, M., Hirsch, E., Stadterman, J., Silverman, M., & Roy, A.K. (2021). Intolerance of uncertainty and risk for anxiety: neuroal mechanisms and cross-cultural implication. the Behavior Therapist, 44, 346-357.
Di Domenico, S.I. & Ryan, R.M. (2017). The emerging neuroscience of intrinsic motivatoin: a new frontier in Self-Determination research. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 11, 1-14.
Dienstbier, R. A., French, J. A., Kamil, A. C., & Leger, D.W. (2001). Motivation and melancholy: A Darwinan perspective In Evoluntionary psychology and motivation: Volume 47 of the Nebraska symposium on motivation. ( pp. 179-203).Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press.
Dong, P. & Lee, S.W.S. (2017). Embodiement as procedures: Physical cleansing changes goal priming effects. Journal of Experimental Pscyhology, 146(4), 592-605.
Dries H. Bostyn, Sybren Sevenhant, Arne Roets. Of Mice, Men, and Trolleys: Hypothetical Judgment Versus Real-Life Behavior in Trolley-Style Moral Dilemmas. Psychological Science, 2018; 095679761775264 DOI: 10.1177/0956797617752640
Ekman, P., & Cordaro, D. (2011). What is meant by calling emotions basic. Emotion Review, 3(4), 364-370.
Eisenegger, C., et. al. (2010). Prejudice and truth about the effects of testosterone in human bargening behavior. Nature, 463, 356.
Fiske, S. T. (2011). Envy up, scorn down: How status divides us. New York, NY: Russell Sage Foundation.
Fredrickson, R. L. (2001). The role of positive emotions in positive psychology: The Broaden-and-Build theory of positive emotions. American Psychologist, 56(3), 218-226.
Friedbert, R.C. & McClure, J.M. (2002). Clinical Practice of Cognitive Therapy with Chldren and Adolescents: The nuts and bolts. NY: Guilford.
Gawronski, B. & Payne, B.K., Eds. (2010). Handbook of Implicit Social Cognition: Measurement, theory, and applications. NY: Guilford Press.
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Gilbert, P. & Choden, P. (2014). Mindful Compassion: How the science of compassion can help you understand your emotions, live in the pressent, and connect deeply with others. Oakland, CA: New Harbinger Publications.
Goldberg, E. (2001). The executive brain: Frontal lobes and the civilized mind. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
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Goleman, D. & Davidson, R.J. (2017).Altered traits: Science reveals how meditation changes your mind, brain, and body. New York, NY: Avery.
Graf, L.K. M. & landwehr, J. R. (2015). A dual-process perspective on fluency-based aesthetics: The pleasure-interest model of aesthetic liking. Personality and Social Psychology Review, 19(4), 395-410.
Graziano, M.S. (2013). Consciousness and the social brain. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
Gray, J. R., Bargh, J. A., & Moresella, E. (2013). Neural correlates of the essence of conscious conflict: fMRI of sustaining incompatible intentions. Experimental Brain Research, 229, 453-465.
Greene, J. (2013). Moral Tribes: Emotion, reason, and the gap between us and them. New York, NY: Penguin Books.
Greven, I. M. & Ramsey, R. (2017). Neural network integration during the perception of in-group and out-group members. Neuropsychologia, 106, 225-235.
Hall, E. (2019). Aristotles’s Way. New York: Penguin Press.
Harding, K. ((2019). The Rabbit Effect: Live longer, happier, and healthier with the groundbreaking science of kindness. New Yokr: Atria.
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Hesse, E. (2008). The Adult Attachment Interview: Protocol, method of analysis, and empirical studies. In J. Cassidy & P.R. Shaver (eds.), Handbook of Attachment: Theory, research, and clinical application, pp. 552-598. NY: Guilford Press.
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Huen, J.M., Ip, B.Y., Ho, S. M., & Yip, P. S. (2015). Hope and hopeless: The role of hope in buffering the impact of hopelessness on suicidal ideation. PLos One, 10(6), 1-13.
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