Emotions, Mood And Feelings
In psychology, emotions, moods and feelings are central to understanding human experience.
Emotions are short-lived, intense reactions to specific stimuli, while moods are more enduring affective states and feelings represent the conscious awareness of these emotional experiences.
1. Emotions
- Definition: Emotions are complex psychological states that involve physiological arousal, subjective experience, and behavioral expression in response to a stimulus.
- Characteristics: Automatic, universal (e.g., anger, fear, joy, sadness).
- Duration: Seconds to minutes.
- Example: Feeling sudden fear when a loud noise occurs.
2. Feelings
- Definition: The subjective experience of emotions, shaped by personal interpretation, memory, and context.
- Characteristics: Conscious awareness of an emotion; influenced by beliefs and past experiences.
- Duration: Can last longer than emotions but are still transient.
- Example: Interpreting fear as anxiety about safety, or joy as gratitude.
3. Mood
- Definition: A sustained emotional state that colors perception and behavior over hours or days.
- Characteristics: Less intense than emotions, not always linked to a specific event, but pervasive.
- Duration: Hours to days.
- Example: Being in a “good mood” all day after receiving positive news, or a “bad mood” without clear cause.