A strong emotional feeling of displeasure aroused by being interfered with, injured or threatened.
Tendency to feel anger toward and to seek to inflict harm upon a person or group.
Frequency and quality of negative emotions, e.g., anger or hostility, expressed by family members or significant others, that often lead to a high relapse rate, especially in schizophrenic patients. (APA, Thesaurus of Psychological Index Terms, 7th ed)
The motivational and/or affective state resulting from being blocked, thwarted, disappointed or defeated.
Observable changes of expression in the face in response to emotional stimuli.
Expressing unconscious emotional conflicts or feelings, often of hostility or love, through overt behavior.
Those affective states which can be experienced and have arousing and motivational properties.
Fury; violent, intense anger.
Check list, usually to be filled out by a person about himself, consisting of many statements about personal characteristics which the subject checks.
Highly pleasant emotion characterized by outward manifestations of gratification; joy.
Behavior which may be manifested by destructive and attacking action which is verbal or physical, by covert attitudes of hostility or by obstructionism.
Predisposition to react to one's environment in a certain way; usually refers to mood changes.
The feeling-tone accompaniment of an idea or mental representation. It is the most direct psychic derivative of instinct and the psychic representative of the various bodily changes by means of which instincts manifest themselves.
Established behavior pattern characterized by excessive drive and ambition, impatience, competitiveness, sense of time urgency, and poorly contained aggression.