Friday, October 14, 2011

Gender and Cultural Differences in Emotion

The gender difference of emotion highly depends on cluture as well. Studies show that women are more emotionally expressive than men. Most clutures, however, raise the men as being the dominant sex, powerful, and strong. Where as women are grown up by believing they are the weaker sex and can be viewed as week. This may effect the study because men may want to hide emotions and be afraid to admit that they are 'weak'.

TO BE CONTINUED...


(http://psycnet.apa.org/index.cfm?fa=buy.optionToBuy&id=1998-00299-010http://psycnet.apa.org/index.cfm?fa=buy.optionToBuy&id=1998-00299-010

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Survival Tip #1: Controling Your Emotions


What is emotion? Well look around you, people show it all the time. You may be smiling right now, or may have fear or anxiety about something. Whatever the case, emotion is the way our body expresses what our mind feels. For example, if we take a spider and the a person with arachnophobia and put them together, then the person would show fear as their emotion because they are terrified of spiders. People, you and I, have shown emotion since birth. Emotion characterizes each person apart from each other. Our emotion is our key to who we, as human beings are.

Emotion is a way of survival for our race. Now let me take you back in time. Back to when are first ancestors roamed the earth. Why did our race stand above the rest? One of the main reasons was emotion. Emotion allowed us to work together and interact, in turn allowing us to complete necessary task towards the development of modern creation. We needed to work together in order for food to be fed into our mouths, defend our tribe, build housing, and more things as we began to become more sofisticated.

Our emotion is basically our thoughts expressed through our facial expressions. As we began to mature as a spiecies, our emotion helped determine if people were in need of help, or were sad, happy, and so on. It allowed us to recognize what was initially either a friend or a foe. We still use emotion today both as a weapon and as a shield. Humans have learned to manipulate their facial expressions for beneficial use, others may manipulate their facial expressions to hide the embarrassment of lets say crying, or hide and control their anger. Next time someone stops you in the street, be aware whether they be a friend or foe and whether you can trust them or not.


Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Alzhemer's: The Slow and Deady Silent Assassin


Alzheimer’s disease is a slow and deadly silent assassin. You can have it in you your whole life, but not be hit by hit until you reach an average age of 65+, however, although rare, there have been cases where the disease has started early for people around the age of 40. It is an illness that has skyrocketed over the past 18 years. 13 years ago only 500,000 people were diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, but now there have been 5,000,000 people in the US alone with the disease. This is amazing considering how over one century ago the disease was so rare it didn’t even have a name! It wasn’t until Alweiss Alzheimer, the discoverer of Alzheimer’s, and the name giver, came across this deadly illness in 1907.

Alzheimer's symptoms may first show up as memory loss or difficulty performing every day thinking tasks that are things the patient never forgets or does wrong, such as simple math problems, or leaving the car keys in the fridge, or going to work in the middle of the morning. They basically show abnormal behavior and conduct abnormal tasks. This is due to the death of nerve cells in the brain that work in the memory center, primarily the Hippocampus. The ability of these cells to communicate with the rest of the nervous system is impaired. Some of the biological signs of Alzheimer's are the formation of clumps in brain called amyloid plaques, as well as tangled nerve fibers called neurofibrillary tangles. The brain, during Alzheimer’s, initially shrinks. This gives people mood swings, can turn a once peaceful person into a violent being, and a variety of other uncommon properties of the average person contaminated by Alzheimer’s.

There is so far no cure to this horrid illness. The worst thing about this illness, however, is the effect of your loved ones and the people around you who are close and how they have to you go through the disease. ‘I am not dying, I am just disappearing before your eyes.’