POLIR-Society-Organization-Psychology-Emotions情緒 : The 6 Types of Basic Emotions and Their Effect on Human Behavior

abaelhe發表於2024-10-13

EMOTIONS > The 6 Types of Basic Emotions and Their Effect on Human Behavior

By Kendra Cherry, MSEd Updated on July 14, 2024
Reviewed by Steven Gans, MD

The 6 Types of Basic Emotions and Their Effect on Human Behavior

There are many different types of emotions that have an influence on how we live and interact with others. At times, it may seem like we are ruled by these emotions. The choices we make, the actions we take, and the perceptions we have are all influenced by the feelings we are experiencing at any given moment.

Psychologists have also tried to identify the different types of emotions that people experience. A few different theories have emerged to categorize and explain the emotions that people feel.


What Human Emotion Are You? Take the Quiz and Find Out

Emotions are a critical component of our daily lives and can often define the human experience. Take this free quiz to help you determine which emotion drives the way you experience the world and express your feelings.

This emotion quiz was medically reviewed by Rachel Goldman, PhD, FTOS.

  1. What color most closely matches how you feel regularly?
    A.Red B.Yellow C.Blue D.Black
  2. When you're faced with a difficult task, you handle it by:
    A.Avoiding everything and everyone.
    B.Lashing out at others due to frustration.
    C.Trying to make it into a fun activity to keep myself relaxed and/or engaged.
    D.Crying and feeling sorry to myself.
  3. When you're in a crowded room of strangers, you tend to:
    A.Avoid interacting with people,
    because it's not worth it.
    B.Find a place to hide hoping
    I don't have to engage with anyone.
    C.Get agitated and give short responses
    when approached .
    D.Strike up a conversation with those near me
    and make some new friends
  4. A coworker gets an exciting job promotion and tells you about it. You react by:
    A.Congratulating them on a well-deserved opportunity
    B.Worrying my job is in trouble, because i didn't receive the best performance review.
    C.Becoming resentful because I have been overlooked for opportunities.
    D.Thinking about how things don't go my way and wishing I got promoted.
  5. You're driving and someone yells and cuts you off. You respond by:
    A.Trying to get away from them, because I am afraid of getting into an accident or altercation.
    B.Getting upset because someone treated me poorly.
    C.A yelling back and giving them a finger.
    D.Shrugging, having a laugh, and continuing with my day.
  6. Which statement describes what it feels like to spend time alone?
    A.I worry people don't like me.
    B.I enjoy time to reflect and get to know myself better.
    C.I am frustrated when people are not available to spend time with me.
    D.I am hurt because it feels like I have nobody.
  7. How often do you experience happiness?
    A.Rarely, because there isn't much to be happy about
    B.Frequently
    C.Sometimes, but I am often worried it won't last
    D.Never, it's hard for me to feel happy
  8. How do you describe your temper?
    A.I am pretty even-tempered and patient
    B.I am not hot-headed, but I can be sensitive about things
    C.I have a short fuse
    D.I can lash out, but only if I feel threatened.
  9. When you're feeling down, you:
    A.Yell at anyone who looks at me the wrong way
    B.Try to lift my mood by doing something I enjoy
    C.Cry and feel sorry to myself
    D.Avoid people as much as I can until I feel better
  10. What type of music do you like best?
    A.Catchy pop tunes
    B.Heavy, loud, harsh and with a strong beat
    C.Instrumentals that switch tempo quickly
    D.Slow, quiet and somber
  11. What are you most likely to worry about?
    A.Where do I start
    B.Something bad happening that changes my life permanently
    C.I take things as they come and try not to worry
    D.Things that makes me furious, I get stuck on them.
  12. When you think about the future, you feel:
    A.Optimistic
    B.Uncertain about what's to come
    C.Scared to think too far ahead
    D.Resentful about things you think won't turn out well



Basic Emotions

During the 1970s, psychologist Paul Eckman identified six basic emotions that he suggested were universally experienced in all human cultures.
The emotions he identified were happiness, sadness, disgust, fear, surprise, and anger.
He later expanded his list of basic emotions to include such things as pride, shame, embarrassment, and excitement.



Combining Emotions

Psychologist Robert Plutchik proposed a "wheel of emotions" that worked something like the color wheel. Emotions can be combined to form different feelings, much like colors can be mixed to create other shades.

According to this theory, the more basic emotions act something like building blocks. More complex, sometimes mixed emotions, are blendings of these more basic ones. For example, basic emotions such as joy and trust can be combined to create love.

A 2017 study suggests that there are far more basic emotions than previously believed. In the study published in Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences, researchers identified 27 different categories of emotion. Rather than being entirely distinct, however, the researchers found that people experience these emotions along a gradient.

Let's take a closer look at some of the basic types of emotions and explore their impact on human behavior.



Happiness

Of all the different types of emotions, happiness tends to be the one that people strive for the most. Happiness is often defined as a pleasant emotional state that is characterized by feelings of contentment, joy, gratification, satisfaction, and well-being.

Research on happiness has increased significantly since the 1960s within a number of disciplines, including the branch of psychology known as positive psychology.
This type of emotion is sometimes expressed through:

  • Facial expressions: such as smiling
  • Body language: such as a relaxed stance
  • Tone of voice: such as an upbeat, pleasant way of speaking

While happiness is considered one of the basic human emotions, the things we think will create happiness tend to be heavily influenced by culture. For example, pop culture influences tend to emphasize that attaining certain things, such as buying a home or having a high-paying job, will result in happiness.

The realities of what actually contributes to happiness are often much more complex and more highly individualized. People have long believed that happiness and health are connected, and research has supported the idea that happiness can play a role in both physical and mental health.

Happiness has been linked to a variety of outcomes including increased longevity and greater marital satisfaction.3 Conversely, unhappiness has been linked to a variety of poor health outcomes and challenges in relationships.

Stress, anxiety, depression, and loneliness, for example, have been linked to things such as lowered immunity, increased inflammation, and decreased life expectancy.



Sadness

Sadness is another type of emotion often defined as a transient emotional state characterized by feelings of disappointment, grief, hopelessness, disinterest, and dampened mood.

Like other emotions, sadness is something that all people experience from time to time. In some cases, people can experience prolonged and severe periods of sadness that can turn into depression. Sadness can be expressed in a number of ways, including:

  • Crying
  • Dampened mood
  • Lethargy
  • Quietness
  • Withdrawal from others

The type and severity of sadness can vary depending upon the root cause, and how people cope with such feelings can also differ.

Sadness can often lead people to engage in coping mechanisms such as avoiding other people, self-medicating, and ruminating on negative thoughts. Such behaviors can actually exacerbate feelings of sadness and prolong the duration of the emotion.



Fear

Fear is a powerful emotion that can also play an important role in survival. When you face some sort of danger and experience fear, you go through what is known as the fight or flight response.

Your muscles become tense, your heart rate and respiration increase, and your mind becomes more alert, priming your body to either run from the danger or stand and fight.

This response helps ensure that you are prepared to deal with threats in your environment effectively. Expressions of this type of emotion can include:

  • Facial expressions: such as widening the eyes and pulling back the chin
  • Body language: attempts to hide or flee from the threat
  • Physiological reactions: such as rapid breathing and heartbeat

Of course, not everyone experiences fear in the same way. Some people may be more sensitive to fear, and certain situations or objects may be more likely to trigger this emotion.

Fear is the emotional response to an immediate threat. We can also develop a similar reaction to anticipated threats or even our thoughts about potential dangers, and this is what we generally think of as anxiety. Social anxiety, for example, involves an anticipated fear of social situations.

Some people, on the other hand, actually seek out fear-provoking situations. Extreme sports and other thrills can be fear-inducing, but some people seem to thrive and even enjoy such feelings.

Repeated exposure to a feared object or situation can lead to familiarity and acclimation, which can reduce feelings of fear and anxiety.

This is the idea behind exposure therapy, in which people are gradually exposed to the things that frighten them in a controlled and safe manner. Eventually, feelings of fear begin to decrease.



Disgust

Disgust is another of the original six basic emotions described by Eckman. Disgust can be displayed in a number of ways including:

  • Body language: turning away from the object of disgust
  • Physical reactions: such as vomiting or retching
  • Facial expressions: such as wrinkling the nose and curling the upper lip

This sense of revulsion can originate from a number of things, including an unpleasant taste, sight, or smell. Researchers believe that this emotion evolved as a reaction to foods that might be harmful or fatal.7 When people smell or taste foods that have gone bad, for example, disgust is a typical reaction.

Poor hygiene, infection, blood, rot, and death can also trigger a disgust response. This may be the body's way of avoiding things that may carry transmittable diseases.

People can also experience moral disgust when they observe others engaging in behaviors that they find distasteful, immoral, or evil.



Anger

Anger can be a particularly powerful emotion characterized by hostility, agitation, frustration, and antagonism toward others. Like fear, anger can affect the body's fight-or-flight response.

When a threat generates feelings of anger, you may be inclined to fend off the danger and protect yourself. Anger is often displayed through:

  • Facial expressions: such as frowning or glaring
  • Body language: such as taking a strong stance or turning away
  • Tone of voice: such as speaking gruffly or yelling
  • Physiological responses: such as sweating or turning red
  • Aggressive behaviors: such as hitting, kicking, or throwing objects

While anger is often thought of as a negative emotion, it can sometimes be a good thing. It can be constructive in helping clarify your needs in a relationship, and it can also motivate you to take action and find solutions to things that are bothering you.

However, anger can become a problem when it is excessive or expressed in unhealthy, dangerous, or harmful ways. Uncontrolled anger can quickly turn to aggression, abuse, or violence.

Related : Anger Issues: Take the Test
This type of emotion can have both mental and physical consequences. Unchecked anger can make it difficult to make rational decisions and can even have an impact on your physical health.

Anger has been linked to coronary heart diseases and diabetes. It has also been linked to behaviors that pose health risks such as aggressive driving, alcohol consumption, and smoking.



Surprise

Surprise is another of Eckman's six basic types of human emotions. It is usually quite brief and characterized by a physiological startle response following something unexpected.

This type of emotion can be positive, negative, or neutral. An unpleasant surprise, for example, might involve someone jumping out from behind a tree and scaring you as you walk to your car at night.

An example of a pleasant surprise would be arriving home to find that your closest friends have gathered to celebrate your birthday. Surprise is often characterized by:

  • Facial expressions: such as raising the brows, widening the eyes, and opening the mouth
  • Physical responses: such as jumping back
  • Verbal reactions: such as yelling, screaming, or gasping

Surprise is another type of emotion that can trigger the fight or flight response. When startled, people may experience a burst of adrenaline that helps prepare the body to either fight or flee.9

Surprise can have important effects on human behavior. For example, research has shown that people tend to disproportionately notice surprising events.

This is why surprising and unusual events in the news tend to stand out in memory more than others. Research has also found that people tend to be more swayed by surprising arguments and learn more from surprising information.



Other Types of Emotions

The six basic emotions described by Eckman are just a portion of the many different types of emotions that people are capable of experiencing.
Eckman's theory suggests that these core emotions are universal throughout cultures all over the world.

However, other theories and new research continue to explore the many different types of emotions and how they are classified. Eckman later added a number of other emotions to his list but suggested that, unlike his original six emotions, not all of these could necessarily be encoded through facial expressions. Some of the emotions he later identified included:

  • Amusement
  • Contempt
  • Contentment
  • Embarrassment
  • Excitement
  • Guilt
  • Pride in achievement
  • Relief
  • Satisfaction
  • Shame



Other Theories of Emotion

As with many concepts in psychology, not all theorists agree on how to classify emotions or what the basic emotions actually are. While Eckman's theory is one of the best-known, other theorists have proposed their own ideas about what emotions make up the core of the human experience.10

For example, some researchers have suggested that there are only two or three basic emotions. Others have suggested that emotions exist in a hierarchy. Primary emotions such as love, joy, surprise, anger, and sadness can then be further broken down into secondary emotions. Love, for example, consists of secondary emotions, such as affection and longing.

These secondary emotions might then be broken down still further into what are known as tertiary emotions. The secondary emotion of affection includes tertiary emotions, such as liking, caring, compassion, and tenderness.

A more recent study suggests that there are at least 27 distinct emotions, all of which are highly interconnected.
After analyzing the responses of more than 800 men to more than 2,000 video clips, researchers created an interactive map to demonstrate how these emotions are related to one another.

“We found that 27 distinct dimensions, not six, were necessary to account for the way hundreds of people reliably reported feeling in response to each video,” explained the senior researcher Dacher Keltner, faculty co-director of the Greater Good Science Center.

In other words, emotions are not states that occur in isolation. Instead, the study suggests that there are gradients of emotion and that these different feelings are deeply inter-related.

Alan Cowen, the study's lead author and former doctoral student in neuroscience at UC Berkeley, suggests that better clarifying the nature of our emotions can help scientists, psychologists, and physicians learn more about how emotions underlie brain activity, behavior, and mood.
By building a better understanding of these states, he hopes that researchers can develop improved treatments for psychiatric conditions.


Final Thoughts

Emotions play a critical role in how we live our lives, from influencing how we engage with others in our day to day lives to affecting the decisions we make. By understanding some of the different types of emotions, you can gain a deeper understanding of how these emotions are expressed and the impact they have on your behavior.

It is important to remember, however, that no emotion is an island. Instead, the many emotions you experience are nuanced and complex, working together to create the rich and varied fabric of your emotional life.

Read Next: Why Am I So Emotional: 6 Reasons You Feel This Way



Created By Reviewed By Date

Kendra Cherry, MSEd
is a psychosocial rehabilitation specialist,
psychology educator, and author of the "Everything Psychology Book."

Steven Gans, MD
is board-certified in psychiatry and is an active supervisor, teacher,
and mentor at Massachusetts General Hospital.
Updated on July 14, 2024

Verywell Mind

  • articles are reviewed by mental health professionals.
  • Reviewers confirm the content is thorough and accurate, reflecting the latest evidence-based research.
  • Content is reviewed before publication and upon substantial updates. Learn more.

相關文章