PSY-200 Chapter Notes - Chapter 11: Life Satisfaction, Display Rules, Facial Feedback Hypothesis

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Expressive suppression: a response-focused strategy for regulating emotion that involves a deliberate attempt to inhibit the outward manifestation of an emotion. Emotional response: the physiological, behavioral/expressive, and subjective changes that occur when emotions are generated. Universal: common to all human beings and seen in cultures all over the world. Facial action coding system (facs): a widely used method for measuring all the observable muscular movements that are possible in the human face. Duchenne smile: a smile that expresses true enjoyment, involving both the muscles that pull up the lip corners diagonally and those that contract the band of muscles encircling the eye. Subjective experience of emotion: the changes in the quality of conscious experiences that occur during emotional responses. James-lange theory of emotion: the idea that it is the perception of the physiological changes that accompany emotions that produces the subjective emotional experience. Facial feedback hypothesis: sensory feedback from the facial musculature during expression affects emotional experience.

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