____ A heightened sense of excitement produced by a feeling of belonging in society.
____ Exchange-based theory in which exchange relationships are thought to produce emotions which are used as an internal source of rewards and punishments for developing cohesion among individuals and groups.
____ Thrill seeking behaviors designed to produce intense emotions.
____ Attributing secondary (i.e. human) emotions to our in groups and not our out-groups.
____ The process of hyperrationality of the service workforce, applying assembly-line techniques to interpersonal work.
____ A diffuse emotional state that lasts a relatively long period of time.
____ Element of emotion referring to the changes in our body that reflect the emotion in a given situation.
____ Element of emotion referring to the terms we use to label our feelings.
____ Expectations about when and how to act excited or angry, or any other emotion.
____ Feelings that incorporate situational cues, physiological changes, expressive gestures, and an emotion label.
____ Element of affect control theory referring to how a person's sentiment toward an object is lively or quiet.
____ An evaluative component of an emotion.
____ The study of emotion that assumes that social conditions shape our emotions, and in turn, our emotions act to maintain social structures.
____ In exchange theory, it is the beliefs about the fairness of what people get.
____ A society's expectation about how to experience different emotions.
____ The generation of prescribed emotion in order to meet the demands of a job.
____ Information about when and what emotions are appropriate in a given social setting.
____ Element of affect control theory referring to how a person's sentiment toward an object is good or bad.
____ Element of an emotion referring to the indications we give of the emotion we are experiencing.
____ Tell us how we should feel in different social interactions.
____ Internal states associated with a particular emotion.
____ Enduring emotional meanings in a given society.
____ The exchange of symbols and emotion between individuals essential to maintaining society.
____ The study of emotions based on the idea that human emotions result from real, anticipated, imagined, or recollected outcomes of social relations.
____ Element of affect control theory referring to how a person's sentiment toward an object is powerful or powerless.
____ Physiologically grounded emotions that we inherit through evolutionary processes, including anger, fear, depression, and satisfaction.
____ In exchange theory, it is the beliefs about the fairness of the methods used to make distributions.
____ Emotions that derive from primary emotions when we attach varying meanings to primary emotions.
____ A system for regulating emotional resources among people.
____ The amount of sympathy that a person can expect from other people.
____ Theory that emphasizes the role of emotions in maintaining macrosociological institutions.
____ Sentiments unique to specific interactions.
____ A feeling that has been given meaning by society.
____ Element of emotion that tells when and what emotion is appropriate in a given social interaction.
____ Theory that argues that the primary means of learning about emotions comes from social instruction, primarily through family, friends, and schooling.