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3. A) Make up the questions using the table below and answer them.

WHAT

- transmits sensory information to the central nervous system?

- helps us interpret sensory stimulation?

- is the weakest amount of a stimulus that can be sensed?

- is utility determination?

- includes everything from small details to complex things?

- is a major factor in much of perception.

- is adaptation?

b) Work in pairs. Ask and answer the questions in the text beginning with “Why…?”.

4. Underline the correct verb.

1.  It has always been assumed/intended that the first thing that happens is that we experience an emotion, and only then we start reacting to the situation physiologically.

2. Over a hundred years ago, William James, the father of American psychology, and Carl Lange, a Danish psychologist, separately introduced/recognized the idea that we have physiological responses to a situation, and only then we use those responses to formulate an experience of emotion. 

3. Walter Cannon and Phillip Bard came/went up with a variation on the James-Lange idea in 1929. 

4. Due to the Cannon-Bard theory, the experience of an emotion, and physiological responses occur/happen together. 

5. In 1937, James Papez noted/nodded that the physiological side of emotion is not just a matter of the hypothalamus, but is a complex network of neural pathways -the Papez circuit. 

6. In 1949, Paul McLean completed and corrected/repaired Papez’s ideas, and called the larger complex the limbic system.

7. Paul McLean suggested/told that there was a certain evolutionary quality in the structure of the brain.

8. Psychologist Stanley Milgram conducted/carried experiments to see if people would obey the commands of authority figures even when those commands conflicted with their own attitudes.

  9. Some things afford various possibilities for action, carry implications about what has happened or will happen and have/belong coherently to a larger context.

10. We see/fill immediately that a hammer is meant for hammering, a pencil for writing, a pipe for smoking.  

  1. Complete the sentences with the following words:

Annoyed, annoying, bored, disappointed, embarrassed, exasperated, fed, furious, irate, irritated, mad, seething

  1. My teacher was … with me for missing her lecture.

  2. He slightly, clearly … that something so obvious should require explanation.

  3. He was clearly … about something.

  4. I was beginning to get … at the long delay.

  5. We are absolutely … about what he has said.

  6. ‘The education department has been shirking its duty,’ an … mother said.

  7. She was still … when they got into the car.

  8. The … thing was that she couldn’t stop saying ‘sorry’ all the time.

  9. There’s nothing worse than a … child.

  10. I’m … up with this job.

  11. Everyone is … with the result.

  12. Most teenagers feel … by their parents.