| two factor theory of emotion definitions |
| # | Definition | Sets |
| 1 | schacter & singer (1962); cognitive theory; there are bodily emotions, but we use the emotions/information to tell us how to reaction in the situation; only when we think, recognize, do we experience the emotion | 9 sets |
| 2 | we don't know how we're feeling until someone can demonstrate it for us: 1) arousal (feeling something), 2) interpretation of arounsal (based on social comparisons) | 1 set |
| 3 | physiological arousal,cognitive interpretation of arousal | 1 set |
| 4 | the cognitive interpretation, or appraisal, of a body reaction drives the subjective experience of emotion | 1 set |
| 5 | 1. cognitive: we have to process a stimuli 2. physiological: have to have a reaction. | 1 set |
| 6 | physical sensations and label what i put on emotion | 1 set |
| 7 | emotion comes from 1) arousal and 2) cognition | 1 set |