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Chapter 14 The Major Motives of Life: Food, Love, Sex, and work 521
Chapter 14
t
he Major Motives of Life: Food, Love, Sex, and Work
The Competent Animal: Motives to Achieve
The Effects of
Motivation on Work
Industrial/organizational
psychologists have measured the
psychological qualities that
spur achievement and the
environmental conditions that
influence productivity and
satisfaction.
The Importance of Goals
People achieve more and feel better
about themselves when goals are:
- specific rather than vaguely defined.
- challenging but achievable.
- framed as approach goals rather
than as avoidance goals. - mastery (learning) goals, learning
the task well, rather than perfor-
mance goals, showing off for others.
Expectations of success or failure play
an important role in motivation: - They can create a self-fulfilling
prophecy. - Expectations of success stem in part
from feelings of self-efficacy.
The Effects of Work on Motivation
Working conditions can increase employees’
satisfaction and motivation, especially when
employees:
- feel their work is meaningful.
- have control over many aspects of their work.
- have varied tasks.
- have supportive relationships.
- get useful feedback.
- have opportunities to learn and advance.
INTRINSIC MOTIVATION
Contextual Factors
(e.g., working conditions,opportunities)
Perceived Goal
(e.g., vague or specific,easy or challenging,
for performance or mastery,avoidance or approach?)
Expectations, Self-efficacy
Personality Factors
(e.g., achievementmotivation)
The Social Animal:
Motives to Love
The Biology of Love
Biological origins of
passionate love may begin
in infancy. The mother–
infant bond involves the
release of vasopressin,
which are involved in
pleasure and reward.
The Psychology of Love
The two major predictors of whom people will
love are:
- proximity: The people nearest are most likely
dearest. - similarity: Like attracts like.
Attachment theory views adults’ love relationships,
like those of infants, as taking one of three forms: - secure.
- avoidant.
- anxious-ambivalent.
Gender, Culture, and Love
- In Western societies, the sexes
do not differ in their feelings of
love but may differ in how they
express those feelings. - Gender differences in love
often reflect economic and
social forces, such as whether a
person can afford to marry for
love or must marry for financial
reasons.
Motives, Values, and the
Pursuit of Happiness
In setting goals, most people are not very good at
predicting what will make them happy or miserable.
- The good is rarely as good as people imagine, and the
bad is rarely as terrible because people adjust quickly
to happy changes and fail to anticipate that they will
handle bad experiences just as quickly. - Having positive, intrinsically enjoyable experiences
makes most people happier than having things. - People who are motivated by the intrinsic satisfaction
of an activity are happier and more satisfied than those
motivated solely by extrinsic rewards.
Three kinds of motivational conflicts can cause distress. They are:
- Approach–approach conflict: A person is equally attracted to two
goals. - Avoidance–avoidance conflict: A person is equally repelled by two
goals. - Approach–avoidance conflict: A person is both attracted to and
repelled by the same goal.
Abraham Maslow believed that human motives could be ranked in a
hierarchy of needs, from basic safety to personal transcendence, but
this theory has had little empirical support.
oxytocin, and endorphins,