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7.2 Specific Topics in Motivation

4 min readnovember 11, 2020

Dalia Savy

Dalia Savy

Mary Valdez

Mary Valdez

John Mohl

John Mohl

Dalia Savy

Dalia Savy

Mary Valdez

Mary Valdez

John Mohl

John Mohl

Attend a live cram event

Review all units live with expert teachers & students

We also have three specific motivations: 🍔, , and 🗣️

Hunger Motivation

We all know our motivation of hunger too well, but let's go into the new information about it!

, two psychologists, derived an experiment that concluded whenever we feel hungry, we experience stomach contractions. Our body, interestingly enough, keeps track of how many calories we take in and how many we burn.

  • circulates through the blood and provides our bodies a major source of energy.

    • If levels decrease, our body is signaled and we become hungry. The brain triggers the hunger in the hypothalamus:

      • ⬆️—Stimulates hunger in a person

        • Produces

        • If your was destroyed, you would never have a will to eat.

        • 💡 Lateral Hypothalamus = Large Hunger

      • ⬇️—Stimulates satiation (fullness) after eating

        • If your was destroyed, you would never stop eating.

    • —Regulates metabolism
    • —Regulates in the bloodstream
https://firebasestorage.googleapis.com/v0/b/fiveable-92889.appspot.com/o/images%2F-2y6wd7jeotWg.jpeg?alt=media&token=99b3b442-6430-460d-9e7f-be3936205d2f

Image Courtesy of Sutori.

There are also lots of neurotransmitters and hormones that play a role in hunger that you should be familiar with:

  1. ⬆️—increases hunger, secreted by an empty stomach

  2. ⬆️—increases hunger, secreted by the hypothalamus

  3. ⬇️—decreases hunger, digestive tract hormone

  4. ⬇️—decreases hunger, protein hormone secreted by fat cells

  5. —controls levels, secreted by

Set-Point Theory

states that every body has a fixed weight. When losing weight, there is increased hunger and lowered metabolism, which causes a weight rebound 🤸‍♀️

Basal Metabolic Rate

This is a measure of how much energy our body takes in while resting and maintaining homeostasis.

Taste Preferences

Some facts to know about hunger:

  • When we think about whether or not we should eat, we automatically think of food. This actually, in turn, triggers hunger.

  • We often consume a lot of carbs when we are upset, since they boost serotonin!

  • As we learned in unit 4, conditioning can alter anything, including our .

  • Our culture tells us what food we should eat and what food we shouldn't eat, impacting our preferences.

  • , or the dislike of new foods 🤢, exists as well, and it is all because of our ancestors. Not trying new, unknown foods protected them.

  • Did you ever notice that you eat more when you are with your friends or family 🍏🍕🍳? This is 100% normal; when we see others eat, it makes us want to eat. Also, having different options definitely plays an impact on how hungry you get.

Sexual Motivation

seeks to describe and explain sexually motivated behavior in order to treat sexual disorders. It is a physiological need that is affected by learning and one’s values.

Zoologist did a sexual survey in 1948, which was the first of its kind, but not that scientific. However, he found that most men and ½ of the women who participated in the survey engaged in premarital sex, which was unheard of at the time in society. 

Sexual Response Cycle

Master’s & Johnson's 1960’s study about sex identified 4 stages for men and women.

  1. Excitement—Beginning of sexual desire. Blood flows to genital region.

  2. Plateau—Sexual desire and excitement peaks. Secretion increases.

  3. Orgasm—Genitals contract causing ejaculation, occuring after sexual stimulation. Breathing, heart rate, and blood pressure reach their highest points.

  4. Resolution—Body returns to an unaroused state. Males enter a , which is a resting period in which they cannot achieve orgasm again until this period is over.

https://firebasestorage.googleapis.com/v0/b/fiveable-92889.appspot.com/o/images%2F-avzNFq91mjuX.jpg?alt=media&token=872149b1-2cd8-4b5f-973c-ec457243294b

Image Courtesy of WebMD.

Sexual Dysfunction

Sometimes, a problem occurs that impairs ones ability to feel sexually excited. The APA classified this disorder in two ways:

  1. A person experiences distress from unusual sexual interest

  2. The sexual desire entails harm to other people

Hormones

Just like everything else, hormones activate sexual behavior and enable puberty in teenagers. The primary female sex hormone is estrogen, while the primary male sex hormone is testosterone. Hormones and sexual attraction go hand in hand together and always interact.

Social Motivation

Humans are generally very social beings, so we have this social affiliation need and it is one of the three basic human motivations.

Belonging

There are a few facts that you should know about feeling connected to others and close to the community you are in:

  • Being social boosted the chances of survival ❤️of our ancestors.

  • If we are both social and have a sense of personal control (autonomy), we usually have a high self esteem and feel valued.

  • Unit 9 is all about social psychology, so you'll learn about all of this in-depth, but we often would do anything to conform to a group and gain acceptance.

  • , or the pain of being excluded, exists as well. Many people reach their low when they end relationships with their close friends or partners. Children who are in the foster system also fear being alone and excluded.

  • is the reason why many immigrants immigrated 🌎 as a society, rather than alone.

In our time and age, we also have social media that impacts our mental health and feeling of . We always see people communicating and taking pictures together. Sometimes, we even see people hanging out just looking at their phones.

Technology 💻📱 really changed our lives, but we have to be careful and monitor our social networking use.

🎥 Watch: AP PsychologyMotivations

🏆 TriviaMotivations

Key Terms to Review (28)

Alfred Kinsey

: Alfred Kinsey was an American biologist who became famous for conducting groundbreaking research on human sexuality in the mid-20th century. His work, often referred to as the Kinsey Reports, challenged conventional beliefs about sexuality and discussed previously taboo subjects.

Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR)

: BMR refers to the number of calories required to keep your body functioning while at rest. In other words, it's the amount of energy used by the body just for basic functions like breathing and maintaining heartbeat.

Belonging

: Belonging refers to our innate need as humans to form and maintain strong, stable interpersonal relationships and feel connected within a group context.

Excitement Phase

: The excitement phase refers to the first stage in the sexual response cycle where there's an initiation or increase in physical arousal such as increased heart rate, breathing, and blood pressure.

Ghrelin

: Ghrelin is a hormone produced by the stomach that stimulates hunger. It's often termed the 'hunger hormone' because it increases food intake and promotes fat storage.

Glucose

: Glucose is a type of sugar that the body uses for energy. The brain monitors blood glucose levels to determine feelings of hunger and satiety.

Hunger Motivation

: Hunger motivation refers to the drive that living beings have to eat food for survival. It's a basic physiological need, which is part of our body's homeostatic mechanisms.

Insulin

: Insulin is a hormone produced by the pancreas that regulates the amount of glucose in the blood. It allows cells to take in sugar for energy or storage, depending on what's needed.

Lateral Hypothalamus

: The lateral hypothalamus is part of the hypothalamus involved in triggering eating and drinking.

Leptin

: Leptin is a hormone produced by fat cells that signals the hypothalamus in the brain about our body fat level. When working properly, leptin helps maintain our body weight within a healthy range.

Neophobia

: Neophobia is the fear of anything new, particularly a persistent and abnormal fear. In its milder form, it can manifest as an unwillingness to try new things or break from routine.

Orexin

: Orexin, also known as hypocretin, is a neurotransmitter that regulates arousal, wakefulness, and appetite.

Orgasm Phase

: The orgasm phase is the climax of the sexual response cycle, characterized by intense pleasure, rapid heart rate, and muscle contractions.

Ostracism

: Ostracism is the act of excluding or ignoring an individual or group by a larger social group. It's a form of social punishment where the ostracized individuals are socially isolated.

Pancreas

: The pancreas is an organ in the body that plays a vital role in converting the food we eat into fuel for the body's cells. It has two main functions: an exocrine function that helps in digestion and an endocrine function that regulates blood sugar.

Plateau Phase

: The second phase of the sexual response cycle where sexual tension builds at a slower pace until it reaches its peak just before orgasm.

PYY

: PYY (Peptide YY) is a hormone that helps regulate appetite. It's released by cells in the intestines and colon after eating, signaling to your brain that you're full.

Refractory Period

: The refractory period is a period immediately following stimulation during which a nerve or muscle is unresponsive to further stimulation.

Resolution Phase

: The final stage in the sexual response cycle, following orgasm, during which physiological responses return to normal levels.

Set-Point Theory

: The set-point theory is a concept in psychology that suggests our body has a pre-determined weight range to which it naturally tries to return, maintaining this 'set point' through adjustments in energy intake and expenditure.

Sexual Dysfunction

: Sexual dysfunction refers to a problem occurring during any phase of the sexual response cycle that prevents an individual or couple from experiencing satisfaction from the sexual activity.

Sexual Motivation

: Sexual motivation refers to the natural instinct and desire to engage in sexual activities for pleasure and/or reproduction.

Sexual Response Cycle

: The sexual response cycle is a model that describes the physiological responses that occur during sexual activity. This cycle consists of four phases: excitement, plateau, orgasm, and resolution.

Social Motivation

: Social motivation is the human need to interact with others and to be accepted by them.

Taste Preferences

: Taste preferences refer to an individual's personal inclination towards certain flavors over others. These preferences can be influenced by genetic factors, cultural practices, or personal experiences.

Thyroid

: The thyroid is a butterfly-shaped gland located in the neck that produces hormones, primarily thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3), which regulate the body's metabolic rate as well as heart and digestive function, muscle control, brain development, mood, and bone maintenance.

Ventromedial Hypothalamus

: The ventromedial hypothalamus is a part of the hypothalamus that signals to stop eating when we are full.

Washburn and Cannon

: Walter B. Cannon was a physiologist who collaborated with A.L. Washburn on groundbreaking research about hunger. They discovered that stomach contractions accompany feelings of hunger.

7.2 Specific Topics in Motivation

4 min readnovember 11, 2020

Dalia Savy

Dalia Savy

Mary Valdez

Mary Valdez

John Mohl

John Mohl

Dalia Savy

Dalia Savy

Mary Valdez

Mary Valdez

John Mohl

John Mohl

Attend a live cram event

Review all units live with expert teachers & students

We also have three specific motivations: 🍔, , and 🗣️

Hunger Motivation

We all know our motivation of hunger too well, but let's go into the new information about it!

, two psychologists, derived an experiment that concluded whenever we feel hungry, we experience stomach contractions. Our body, interestingly enough, keeps track of how many calories we take in and how many we burn.

  • circulates through the blood and provides our bodies a major source of energy.

    • If levels decrease, our body is signaled and we become hungry. The brain triggers the hunger in the hypothalamus:

      • ⬆️—Stimulates hunger in a person

        • Produces

        • If your was destroyed, you would never have a will to eat.

        • 💡 Lateral Hypothalamus = Large Hunger

      • ⬇️—Stimulates satiation (fullness) after eating

        • If your was destroyed, you would never stop eating.

    • —Regulates metabolism
    • —Regulates in the bloodstream
https://firebasestorage.googleapis.com/v0/b/fiveable-92889.appspot.com/o/images%2F-2y6wd7jeotWg.jpeg?alt=media&token=99b3b442-6430-460d-9e7f-be3936205d2f

Image Courtesy of Sutori.

There are also lots of neurotransmitters and hormones that play a role in hunger that you should be familiar with:

  1. ⬆️—increases hunger, secreted by an empty stomach

  2. ⬆️—increases hunger, secreted by the hypothalamus

  3. ⬇️—decreases hunger, digestive tract hormone

  4. ⬇️—decreases hunger, protein hormone secreted by fat cells

  5. —controls levels, secreted by

Set-Point Theory

states that every body has a fixed weight. When losing weight, there is increased hunger and lowered metabolism, which causes a weight rebound 🤸‍♀️

Basal Metabolic Rate

This is a measure of how much energy our body takes in while resting and maintaining homeostasis.

Taste Preferences

Some facts to know about hunger:

  • When we think about whether or not we should eat, we automatically think of food. This actually, in turn, triggers hunger.

  • We often consume a lot of carbs when we are upset, since they boost serotonin!

  • As we learned in unit 4, conditioning can alter anything, including our .

  • Our culture tells us what food we should eat and what food we shouldn't eat, impacting our preferences.

  • , or the dislike of new foods 🤢, exists as well, and it is all because of our ancestors. Not trying new, unknown foods protected them.

  • Did you ever notice that you eat more when you are with your friends or family 🍏🍕🍳? This is 100% normal; when we see others eat, it makes us want to eat. Also, having different options definitely plays an impact on how hungry you get.

Sexual Motivation

seeks to describe and explain sexually motivated behavior in order to treat sexual disorders. It is a physiological need that is affected by learning and one’s values.

Zoologist did a sexual survey in 1948, which was the first of its kind, but not that scientific. However, he found that most men and ½ of the women who participated in the survey engaged in premarital sex, which was unheard of at the time in society. 

Sexual Response Cycle

Master’s & Johnson's 1960’s study about sex identified 4 stages for men and women.

  1. Excitement—Beginning of sexual desire. Blood flows to genital region.

  2. Plateau—Sexual desire and excitement peaks. Secretion increases.

  3. Orgasm—Genitals contract causing ejaculation, occuring after sexual stimulation. Breathing, heart rate, and blood pressure reach their highest points.

  4. Resolution—Body returns to an unaroused state. Males enter a , which is a resting period in which they cannot achieve orgasm again until this period is over.

https://firebasestorage.googleapis.com/v0/b/fiveable-92889.appspot.com/o/images%2F-avzNFq91mjuX.jpg?alt=media&token=872149b1-2cd8-4b5f-973c-ec457243294b

Image Courtesy of WebMD.

Sexual Dysfunction

Sometimes, a problem occurs that impairs ones ability to feel sexually excited. The APA classified this disorder in two ways:

  1. A person experiences distress from unusual sexual interest

  2. The sexual desire entails harm to other people

Hormones

Just like everything else, hormones activate sexual behavior and enable puberty in teenagers. The primary female sex hormone is estrogen, while the primary male sex hormone is testosterone. Hormones and sexual attraction go hand in hand together and always interact.

Social Motivation

Humans are generally very social beings, so we have this social affiliation need and it is one of the three basic human motivations.

Belonging

There are a few facts that you should know about feeling connected to others and close to the community you are in:

  • Being social boosted the chances of survival ❤️of our ancestors.

  • If we are both social and have a sense of personal control (autonomy), we usually have a high self esteem and feel valued.

  • Unit 9 is all about social psychology, so you'll learn about all of this in-depth, but we often would do anything to conform to a group and gain acceptance.

  • , or the pain of being excluded, exists as well. Many people reach their low when they end relationships with their close friends or partners. Children who are in the foster system also fear being alone and excluded.

  • is the reason why many immigrants immigrated 🌎 as a society, rather than alone.

In our time and age, we also have social media that impacts our mental health and feeling of . We always see people communicating and taking pictures together. Sometimes, we even see people hanging out just looking at their phones.

Technology 💻📱 really changed our lives, but we have to be careful and monitor our social networking use.

🎥 Watch: AP PsychologyMotivations

🏆 TriviaMotivations

Key Terms to Review (28)

Alfred Kinsey

: Alfred Kinsey was an American biologist who became famous for conducting groundbreaking research on human sexuality in the mid-20th century. His work, often referred to as the Kinsey Reports, challenged conventional beliefs about sexuality and discussed previously taboo subjects.

Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR)

: BMR refers to the number of calories required to keep your body functioning while at rest. In other words, it's the amount of energy used by the body just for basic functions like breathing and maintaining heartbeat.

Belonging

: Belonging refers to our innate need as humans to form and maintain strong, stable interpersonal relationships and feel connected within a group context.

Excitement Phase

: The excitement phase refers to the first stage in the sexual response cycle where there's an initiation or increase in physical arousal such as increased heart rate, breathing, and blood pressure.

Ghrelin

: Ghrelin is a hormone produced by the stomach that stimulates hunger. It's often termed the 'hunger hormone' because it increases food intake and promotes fat storage.

Glucose

: Glucose is a type of sugar that the body uses for energy. The brain monitors blood glucose levels to determine feelings of hunger and satiety.

Hunger Motivation

: Hunger motivation refers to the drive that living beings have to eat food for survival. It's a basic physiological need, which is part of our body's homeostatic mechanisms.

Insulin

: Insulin is a hormone produced by the pancreas that regulates the amount of glucose in the blood. It allows cells to take in sugar for energy or storage, depending on what's needed.

Lateral Hypothalamus

: The lateral hypothalamus is part of the hypothalamus involved in triggering eating and drinking.

Leptin

: Leptin is a hormone produced by fat cells that signals the hypothalamus in the brain about our body fat level. When working properly, leptin helps maintain our body weight within a healthy range.

Neophobia

: Neophobia is the fear of anything new, particularly a persistent and abnormal fear. In its milder form, it can manifest as an unwillingness to try new things or break from routine.

Orexin

: Orexin, also known as hypocretin, is a neurotransmitter that regulates arousal, wakefulness, and appetite.

Orgasm Phase

: The orgasm phase is the climax of the sexual response cycle, characterized by intense pleasure, rapid heart rate, and muscle contractions.

Ostracism

: Ostracism is the act of excluding or ignoring an individual or group by a larger social group. It's a form of social punishment where the ostracized individuals are socially isolated.

Pancreas

: The pancreas is an organ in the body that plays a vital role in converting the food we eat into fuel for the body's cells. It has two main functions: an exocrine function that helps in digestion and an endocrine function that regulates blood sugar.

Plateau Phase

: The second phase of the sexual response cycle where sexual tension builds at a slower pace until it reaches its peak just before orgasm.

PYY

: PYY (Peptide YY) is a hormone that helps regulate appetite. It's released by cells in the intestines and colon after eating, signaling to your brain that you're full.

Refractory Period

: The refractory period is a period immediately following stimulation during which a nerve or muscle is unresponsive to further stimulation.

Resolution Phase

: The final stage in the sexual response cycle, following orgasm, during which physiological responses return to normal levels.

Set-Point Theory

: The set-point theory is a concept in psychology that suggests our body has a pre-determined weight range to which it naturally tries to return, maintaining this 'set point' through adjustments in energy intake and expenditure.

Sexual Dysfunction

: Sexual dysfunction refers to a problem occurring during any phase of the sexual response cycle that prevents an individual or couple from experiencing satisfaction from the sexual activity.

Sexual Motivation

: Sexual motivation refers to the natural instinct and desire to engage in sexual activities for pleasure and/or reproduction.

Sexual Response Cycle

: The sexual response cycle is a model that describes the physiological responses that occur during sexual activity. This cycle consists of four phases: excitement, plateau, orgasm, and resolution.

Social Motivation

: Social motivation is the human need to interact with others and to be accepted by them.

Taste Preferences

: Taste preferences refer to an individual's personal inclination towards certain flavors over others. These preferences can be influenced by genetic factors, cultural practices, or personal experiences.

Thyroid

: The thyroid is a butterfly-shaped gland located in the neck that produces hormones, primarily thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3), which regulate the body's metabolic rate as well as heart and digestive function, muscle control, brain development, mood, and bone maintenance.

Ventromedial Hypothalamus

: The ventromedial hypothalamus is a part of the hypothalamus that signals to stop eating when we are full.

Washburn and Cannon

: Walter B. Cannon was a physiologist who collaborated with A.L. Washburn on groundbreaking research about hunger. They discovered that stomach contractions accompany feelings of hunger.


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AP® and SAT® are trademarks registered by the College Board, which is not affiliated with, and does not endorse this website.


© 2024 Fiveable Inc. All rights reserved.

AP® and SAT® are trademarks registered by the College Board, which is not affiliated with, and does not endorse this website.