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Surprise (emotion)

Surprise (pronunciation) is a brief mental and physiological state, a startle response experienced by animals and humans as the result of an unexpected event. Surprise can have any valence; that is, it can be neutral/moderate, pleasant, unpleasant, positive, or negative. Surprise can occur in varying levels of intensity ranging from very-surprised, which may induce the fight-or-flight response, or little-surprise that elicits a less intense response to the stimuli.

Construct Edit

 
Facial expressions of astonishment
 
A child looks at her iPad (not pictured) with surprise.

Surprise is intimately connected to the idea of acting in accordance with a set of rules. When the rules of reality generating events of daily life separate from the rule-of-thumb expectations, surprise is the outcome. Surprise represents the difference between expectations and reality, the gap between our assumptions and expectations about worldly events and the way that those events actually turn out.[1] This gap can be deemed an important foundation on which new findings are based since surprises can make people aware of their own ignorance. The acknowledgement of ignorance, in turn, can mean a window to new knowledge.[2]

Violation of expectancies

Surprise can also occur due to a violation of expectancies. In the specific case of interpersonal communication, the Expectancy Violation Theory (EVT) says that three factors influence a person's expectations: interactant variables, environmental variables, and variables related to the nature of the interaction or environmental variables.[3]

  • Interactant variables involve traits of the persons involved in the communication and in this instance the communication leading to surprise, including: sex, socio-economic status, age, race, and appearance.[3]
  • Environmental variables that effect the communication of surprise include: proxemics, chronemics, and the nature of the surroundings of the interaction.[3]
  • Interaction variables that influence surprise include: social norms, cultural norms, physiological influences, biological influences and unique individual behavioral patterns.[3]

Surprise may occur due to a violation of one, two, or a combination of all three factors.

Surprise does not always have to have a negative valence. EVT proposes that expectancy's will influence the outcome of the communication as a confirmation, behaviors within the expected range, or violation, behaviors outside the expected range.[3] EVT also postulates that positive interactions will increase the level of attraction of the violator, whereas negative violations decrease the attraction.[4] Positive violations would then cause positive surprise, such as a surprise birthday party, and negative violations would cause negative surprise, such as a parking ticket. Positive violations may enhance credibility, power, attraction, and persuasiveness. Negative violations may reduce them.[3]

Non-verbal responses Edit

 
Belshazzar's Feast, by Rembrandt. Representation of the biblical passage in Daniel 5:1–31
 
Comedian Carol Burnett looking surprised

Surprise is expressed in the face by the following features:

  • Eyebrows that are raised so they become curved and high.
  • Horizontal wrinkles across the forehead.
  • Open eyelids: the upper lid is raised and the lower lid is drawn down, often exposing the white sclera above and below the iris.
  • Pupil dilation mydriasis[5] or pupil constriction miosis
  • Dropped jaw so that the lips and teeth are parted, with no tension around the mouth.

Spontaneous, involuntary surprise is often expressed for only a fraction of a second. It may be followed immediately by the emotion of fear, joy or confusion. The intensity of the surprise is associated with how much the jaw drops, but the mouth may not open at all in some cases. The raising of the eyebrows, at least momentarily, is the most distinctive and predictable sign of surprise.[6]

Despite the facial feedback hypothesis (that facial display is necessary in the experience of emotion or a major determinant of feelings), in the case of surprise, some research has shown a strong lack of connection between the facial display of surprise and the actual experience of surprise. This suggests that there are variations in the expression of surprise.[7] It has been suggested that surprise is an envelope term for both the startle response and also disbelief. More recent research shows that raising of the eyebrows does provide facial feedback to disbelief but not to the startle.[8]

 
Widening (dilation) of the pupils is a non-verbal response to surprise.

Pupil dilation and constriction can determine the valence of surprise from the action to the reaction of the individual. Positive valence to surprise is shown through a dilation or expansion of the pupil, where as negative valence in surprise is associated with pupil constriction.[9] But, newer studies show pupil dilation for negative as well as positive stimuli, indicating a general autonomous arousal associated with pupil dilation and not affective valence.[10]

Non-verbal responses to surprise can also be affected by voice inflection, distance, time, environment, volume, rate, quality, pitch, speaking style, and even the level of eye contact made by an individual trying to cause a surprise.[11] These non-verbal cues help to define whether the perceived surprise will have a positive or negative valence and to what degree the surprise will be induced by the individual.

Verbal responses Edit

Linguistics may play a role in the formulation of surprise. The Language expectancy theory (LET) states that people develop norms and expectations concerning appropriate usage of a language in a given situation.[12] When norms or expectations of verbal language are violated surprise may occur. The EVT model supports that expectations can be violated verbally[3] and this violation may cause a surprise within the individual. Expectations of verbal language that may lead to surprise may include but are not limited to, expletives, shouts, screams, and gasps.

The aforementioned expectations of verbal language are more closely associated to negative expectancies of surprise, but positive surprise can occur from verbal interaction as well. A positive violation of expectations that could result in a positive surprise may include a low credibility source making a persuasive argument that leads to the change of beliefs or emotions thus enhancing the speaker's credibility.[12] The move from a low credibility source to a high credibility source can elicit a positive surprise among individuals. The act of being persuaded by said speaker can also elicit a positive surprise, as an individual may have perceived the speaker as having too low of a credibility to elicit change and the change of beliefs or emotion then causes surprise.

Physiological responses Edit

 
Sunday at the Museum, Honoré Daumier
 
Emperor Pedro I of Brazil is visibly surprised by his wife Amélie as she presents him with the sword that belonged to her father Eugène de Beauharnais.

The physiological response of surprise falls under the category of the startle response. The main function of surprise or the startle response is to interrupt an ongoing action and reorient attention to a new, possibly significant event. There is an automatic redirection of focus to the new stimuli and, for a brief moment, this causes tenseness in the muscles, especially the neck muscles. Studies show that this response happens extremely fast, with information (in this case a loud noise) reaching the pons within 3 to 8 ms and the full startle reflex occurring in less than two tenths of a second.[16]

If the startle response is strongly elicited through surprise then it will bring on the fight-or-flight response, which is a perceived harmful event, attack, or threat to survival[17] that causes a release of adrenaline for a boost of energy as a means to escape or fight. This response generally has a negative valence in terms of surprise.

Surprise has one core appraisal-appraising something as new and unexpected-but new appraisals can shift the experience of surprise to another. Appraising an event as new predicts surprise, but the appraisal of the coping mechanism predicts the response beyond surprise, such as confusion or interest.[18]

Familiarity Edit

As individuals become more accustomed to particular types of surprise, over time the level of surprise will decrease in intensity. This does not necessarily mean that an individual, for instance, will not be surprised during the jump scene of a scary movie, it implies that the individual may expect the jump scene due to familiarity with scary movies, thus lowering the level of surprise.[3] The EVT model helps to support this claim because as individuals become more accustomed to a situation or communication, it becomes less and less likely that the situation or communication will cause a violation of expectation, and without violating an expectation, surprise cannot occur.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ John Casti; Complexification: Explaining a Paradoxical World through the Science of Surprise . New York: HarperCollins, 1994.
  2. ^ Matthias Gross; Ignorance and Surprise: Science, Society, and Ecological Design. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2010.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Burgoon, J. K.; Jones, S. B. (1976). "Toward a Theory of Personal Space Expectations and Their Violations". Human Communication Research. 2 (2): 131–146. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2958.1976.tb00706.x.
  4. ^ Burgoon, J. K.; Hale, J. L. (1988). "Nonverbal Expectancy Violations: Model Elaboration and Application to Immediacy Behaviors". Communication Monographs. 55: 58–79. doi:10.1080/03637758809376158.
  5. ^ Ellis, CJ (1981). "The pupillary light reflex in normal subjects". Br J Ophthalmol. 65 (11): 754–9. doi:10.1136/bjo.65.11.754. PMC 1039657. PMID 7326222.
  6. ^ Ekman, P. & Friesen, W. V. (1975). Unmasking the face. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall, Inc.
  7. ^ Reisenzein, Rainer; Bordgen, Sandra; Holtbernd, Thomas; Matz, Denise (August 2006). (PDF). Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 91 (2): 295–315. doi:10.1037/0022-3514.91.2.295. PMID 16881766. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 11, 2016. Retrieved October 11, 2011.
  8. ^ "Exploring the positive and negative implications of facial feedback". APA PsycNET. Retrieved 2015-11-02.
  9. ^ Hess, Eckhard H.; Polt, James M. (1960). "Pupil Size as Related to Interest Value of Visual Stimuli". Science. 132 (3423): 349–50. Bibcode:1960Sci...132..349H. doi:10.1126/science.132.3423.349. PMID 14401489. S2CID 12857616.
  10. ^ Partala, Timo; Surakka, Veikko. (2003), "Pupil size variation as an indication of affective processing", International journal of human-computer studies 59.1 : 185–198
  11. ^ Burgoon, J.K., Dunbar, N.E, & Segrin, C. (2002). Non-verbal influence "The persuasion handbook". p.445-465.
  12. ^ a b Burgoon, M. & Miller. (1979). Language expectancy theory. The persuasion handbook.p. 177-133
  13. ^ "Robert Plutchik's Psychoevolutionary Theory of Basic Emotions" (PDF). Adliterate.com. Retrieved 2017-06-05.
  14. ^ Jonathan Turner (1 June 2000). On the Origins of Human Emotions: A Sociological Inquiry Into the Evolution of Human Affect. Stanford University Press. p. 76. ISBN 978-0-8047-6436-0.
  15. ^ Atifa Athar; M. Saleem Khan; Khalil Ahmed; Aiesha Ahmed; Nida Anwar (June 2011). "A Fuzzy Inference System for Synergy Estimation of Simultaneous Emotion Dynamics in Agents". International Journal of Scientific & Engineering Research. 2 (6).
  16. ^ Kalat, James W. (2009). Biological Psychology (10th ed.). Belmont, Calif.: Wadsworth, Cengage Learning. pp. 357–358.
  17. ^ Cannon, Walter (1932). Wisdom of the Body. United States: W.W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0393002055.
  18. ^ Silva, Paul J. (2009). "Looking Past Pleasure: Anger, Confusion, Disgust, Pride, Surprise, and Other Unusual Aesthetic Emotions" (PDF). Psychology of Aesthetics, Creativity, and the Arts. 3 (1): 48–51. doi:10.1037/a0014632.

External links Edit

  •   Media related to Surprise at Wikimedia Commons

surprise, emotion, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, surprise, emotion, news, newspapers, books, schol. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Surprise emotion news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message Surprise pronunciation is a brief mental and physiological state a startle response experienced by animals and humans as the result of an unexpected event Surprise can have any valence that is it can be neutral moderate pleasant unpleasant positive or negative Surprise can occur in varying levels of intensity ranging from very surprised which may induce the fight or flight response or little surprise that elicits a less intense response to the stimuli Contents 1 Construct 2 Non verbal responses 3 Verbal responses 4 Physiological responses 5 Familiarity 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksConstruct Edit nbsp Facial expressions of astonishment nbsp A child looks at her iPad not pictured with surprise Surprise is intimately connected to the idea of acting in accordance with a set of rules When the rules of reality generating events of daily life separate from the rule of thumb expectations surprise is the outcome Surprise represents the difference between expectations and reality the gap between our assumptions and expectations about worldly events and the way that those events actually turn out 1 This gap can be deemed an important foundation on which new findings are based since surprises can make people aware of their own ignorance The acknowledgement of ignorance in turn can mean a window to new knowledge 2 source source source source source source source Violation of expectanciesSurprise can also occur due to a violation of expectancies In the specific case of interpersonal communication the Expectancy Violation Theory EVT says that three factors influence a person s expectations interactant variables environmental variables and variables related to the nature of the interaction or environmental variables 3 Interactant variables involve traits of the persons involved in the communication and in this instance the communication leading to surprise including sex socio economic status age race and appearance 3 Environmental variables that effect the communication of surprise include proxemics chronemics and the nature of the surroundings of the interaction 3 Interaction variables that influence surprise include social norms cultural norms physiological influences biological influences and unique individual behavioral patterns 3 Surprise may occur due to a violation of one two or a combination of all three factors Surprise does not always have to have a negative valence EVT proposes that expectancy s will influence the outcome of the communication as a confirmation behaviors within the expected range or violation behaviors outside the expected range 3 EVT also postulates that positive interactions will increase the level of attraction of the violator whereas negative violations decrease the attraction 4 Positive violations would then cause positive surprise such as a surprise birthday party and negative violations would cause negative surprise such as a parking ticket Positive violations may enhance credibility power attraction and persuasiveness Negative violations may reduce them 3 Non verbal responses Edit nbsp Belshazzar s Feast by Rembrandt Representation of the biblical passage in Daniel 5 1 31 nbsp Comedian Carol Burnett looking surprisedSurprise is expressed in the face by the following features Eyebrows that are raised so they become curved and high Horizontal wrinkles across the forehead Open eyelids the upper lid is raised and the lower lid is drawn down often exposing the white sclera above and below the iris Pupil dilation mydriasis 5 or pupil constriction miosis Dropped jaw so that the lips and teeth are parted with no tension around the mouth Spontaneous involuntary surprise is often expressed for only a fraction of a second It may be followed immediately by the emotion of fear joy or confusion The intensity of the surprise is associated with how much the jaw drops but the mouth may not open at all in some cases The raising of the eyebrows at least momentarily is the most distinctive and predictable sign of surprise 6 Despite the facial feedback hypothesis that facial display is necessary in the experience of emotion or a major determinant of feelings in the case of surprise some research has shown a strong lack of connection between the facial display of surprise and the actual experience of surprise This suggests that there are variations in the expression of surprise 7 It has been suggested that surprise is an envelope term for both the startle response and also disbelief More recent research shows that raising of the eyebrows does provide facial feedback to disbelief but not to the startle 8 nbsp Widening dilation of the pupils is a non verbal response to surprise Pupil dilation and constriction can determine the valence of surprise from the action to the reaction of the individual Positive valence to surprise is shown through a dilation or expansion of the pupil where as negative valence in surprise is associated with pupil constriction 9 But newer studies show pupil dilation for negative as well as positive stimuli indicating a general autonomous arousal associated with pupil dilation and not affective valence 10 Non verbal responses to surprise can also be affected by voice inflection distance time environment volume rate quality pitch speaking style and even the level of eye contact made by an individual trying to cause a surprise 11 These non verbal cues help to define whether the perceived surprise will have a positive or negative valence and to what degree the surprise will be induced by the individual Verbal responses EditLinguistics may play a role in the formulation of surprise The Language expectancy theory LET states that people develop norms and expectations concerning appropriate usage of a language in a given situation 12 When norms or expectations of verbal language are violated surprise may occur The EVT model supports that expectations can be violated verbally 3 and this violation may cause a surprise within the individual Expectations of verbal language that may lead to surprise may include but are not limited to expletives shouts screams and gasps The aforementioned expectations of verbal language are more closely associated to negative expectancies of surprise but positive surprise can occur from verbal interaction as well A positive violation of expectations that could result in a positive surprise may include a low credibility source making a persuasive argument that leads to the change of beliefs or emotions thus enhancing the speaker s credibility 12 The move from a low credibility source to a high credibility source can elicit a positive surprise among individuals The act of being persuaded by said speaker can also elicit a positive surprise as an individual may have perceived the speaker as having too low of a credibility to elicit change and the change of beliefs or emotion then causes surprise Physiological responses Edit nbsp Sunday at the Museum Honore Daumier nbsp Emperor Pedro I of Brazil is visibly surprised by his wife Amelie as she presents him with the sword that belonged to her father Eugene de Beauharnais The physiological response of surprise falls under the category of the startle response The main function of surprise or the startle response is to interrupt an ongoing action and reorient attention to a new possibly significant event There is an automatic redirection of focus to the new stimuli and for a brief moment this causes tenseness in the muscles especially the neck muscles Studies show that this response happens extremely fast with information in this case a loud noise reaching the pons within 3 to 8 ms and the full startle reflex occurring in less than two tenths of a second 16 If the startle response is strongly elicited through surprise then it will bring on the fight or flight response which is a perceived harmful event attack or threat to survival 17 that causes a release of adrenaline for a boost of energy as a means to escape or fight This response generally has a negative valence in terms of surprise Surprise has one core appraisal appraising something as new and unexpected but new appraisals can shift the experience of surprise to another Appraising an event as new predicts surprise but the appraisal of the coping mechanism predicts the response beyond surprise such as confusion or interest 18 Familiarity EditSee also Perception Familiarity As individuals become more accustomed to particular types of surprise over time the level of surprise will decrease in intensity This does not necessarily mean that an individual for instance will not be surprised during the jump scene of a scary movie it implies that the individual may expect the jump scene due to familiarity with scary movies thus lowering the level of surprise 3 The EVT model helps to support this claim because as individuals become more accustomed to a situation or communication it becomes less and less likely that the situation or communication will cause a violation of expectation and without violating an expectation surprise cannot occur See also EditAffective neuroscience Paul Ekman Interest emotion Carroll Izard Ignorance Nihil admirari Postponement of affect Predictable surprise Startle responseReferences Edit John Casti Complexification Explaining a Paradoxical World through the Science of Surprise New York HarperCollins 1994 Matthias Gross Ignorance and Surprise Science Society and Ecological Design Cambridge MA MIT Press 2010 a b c d e f g h Burgoon J K Jones S B 1976 Toward a Theory of Personal Space Expectations and Their Violations Human Communication Research 2 2 131 146 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2958 1976 tb00706 x Burgoon J K Hale J L 1988 Nonverbal Expectancy Violations Model Elaboration and Application to Immediacy Behaviors Communication Monographs 55 58 79 doi 10 1080 03637758809376158 Ellis CJ 1981 The pupillary light reflex in normal subjects Br J Ophthalmol 65 11 754 9 doi 10 1136 bjo 65 11 754 PMC 1039657 PMID 7326222 Ekman P amp Friesen W V 1975 Unmasking the face Englewood Cliffs NJ Prentice Hall Inc Reisenzein Rainer Bordgen Sandra Holtbernd Thomas Matz Denise August 2006 Evidence for strong dissociation between emotion and facial displays The case of surprise PDF Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 91 2 295 315 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 91 2 295 PMID 16881766 Archived from the original PDF on April 11 2016 Retrieved October 11 2011 Exploring the positive and negative implications of facial feedback APA PsycNET Retrieved 2015 11 02 Hess Eckhard H Polt James M 1960 Pupil Size as Related to Interest Value of Visual Stimuli Science 132 3423 349 50 Bibcode 1960Sci 132 349H doi 10 1126 science 132 3423 349 PMID 14401489 S2CID 12857616 Partala Timo Surakka Veikko 2003 Pupil size variation as an indication of affective processing International journal of human computer studies 59 1 185 198 Burgoon J K Dunbar N E amp Segrin C 2002 Non verbal influence The persuasion handbook p 445 465 a b Burgoon M amp Miller 1979 Language expectancy theory The persuasion handbook p 177 133 Robert Plutchik s Psychoevolutionary Theory of Basic Emotions PDF Adliterate com Retrieved 2017 06 05 Jonathan Turner 1 June 2000 On the Origins of Human Emotions A Sociological Inquiry Into the Evolution of Human Affect Stanford University Press p 76 ISBN 978 0 8047 6436 0 Atifa Athar M Saleem Khan Khalil Ahmed Aiesha Ahmed Nida Anwar June 2011 A Fuzzy Inference System for Synergy Estimation of Simultaneous Emotion Dynamics in Agents International Journal of Scientific amp Engineering Research 2 6 Kalat James W 2009 Biological Psychology 10th ed Belmont Calif Wadsworth Cengage Learning pp 357 358 Cannon Walter 1932 Wisdom of the Body United States W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0393002055 Silva Paul J 2009 Looking Past Pleasure Anger Confusion Disgust Pride Surprise and Other Unusual Aesthetic Emotions PDF Psychology of Aesthetics Creativity and the Arts 3 1 48 51 doi 10 1037 a0014632 External links Edit nbsp Media related to Surprise at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Surprise emotion amp oldid 1181110877, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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