• The women who said they struggled with the decision or felt stigmatized by it were more likely to report feeling guilt, anger or sadness immediately after the abortion, but over time, these feelings declined dramatically, sometimes even one year after the abortion. (cnn.com)
  • Earlier research that looked at women's feelings over three years after an abortion has shown that women experience decreasing emotional intensity over time, and that the overwhelming majority feel the decision was the right one. (cnn.com)
  • In other words, feeling our feelings is important, more so than whether they are positive or negative. (psychologytoday.com)
  • They indicate how happy they are through ultrasonic vocalizations that Melotti says are very strongly linked to positive feelings, and by returning to the experimenter's hands for more tickling. (npr.org)
  • Users seemed to be most influenced by others' posts when those posts contained feelings that violated their cultural values," explained Tsai, the Yumi and Yasunori Kaneko Family University Fellow in Undergraduate Education in H&S and the director of the Stanford Culture and Emotion Lab . (stanford.edu)
  • According to Dr. Michelle Craske, a distinguished professor of psychology and psychiatry at UCLA, who echoes many in the field, "Identifying our feelings has been shown to help us manage difficult emotions, appreciate positive moments, and improve wellbeing. (apple.com)
  • Multiple studies by researchers have shown that identifying feelings reduces emotions like sadness and anger, and positively impacts our body by slowing our heart rate. (apple.com)
  • Gratitude research is beginning to suggest that feelings of thankfulness have tremendous positive value in helping people cope with daily problems, especially stress, and to achieve a positive sense of the self. (beliefnet.com)
  • Aligned to our Company's purpose of creating for happier, healthier lives with love for nature, MoodScentz® fragrances are helping our consumers boost their positive feelings and helping overcome negative mood states - our personal emotions are so important in these unprecedented times. (givaudan.com)
  • So, the TL;DR is that Christmas music has a special ability to make you feel lots of emotions, from jolliness to nostalgia, and a bunch of nuanced feelings in between. (refinery29.com)
  • In January, researchers from the University of California San Francisco released results from their study of 667 women who were asked about their feelings about their abortions one week after the procedure and twice a year after that. (populationconnection.org)
  • At one week, 51 percent of participants reported feeling mostly positive emotions about their decision, while only 17 percent expressed negative feelings. (populationconnection.org)
  • After five years, 84 percent reported either positive or no feelings, while only 6 percent reported negative feelings. (populationconnection.org)
  • European Americans prefer positive feelings over negative ones while Chinese tend to experience a balance between the two, new Stanford research shows. (seniorwomen.com)
  • Researchers have found that writing down how you feel helps sort through those feelings better than keeping them to yourself. (theepochtimes.com)
  • The [responsive] parenting literature laid the foundation for thinking about feeding responsively, and we looked at all the positive outcomes around parenting and wondered if responsive feeding would also protect against weight gain and help young children learn how to regulate their energy intake by paying close attention to their feelings of hunger and fullness. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Researchers found that at five years after having an abortion, only 6% expressed primarily negative emotions. (cnn.com)
  • The researchers found that people may be happier when they feel the emotions they desire, regardless of whether those desired emotions were pleasant or unpleasant. (psychologytoday.com)
  • Researchers found that rats experiencing positive emotions had an increased pinkish hue on their ears, like the animal on the left. (npr.org)
  • A team of scientists in Switzerland found that a rat's ears are more pinkish and are positioned at a more relaxed angle when it is experiencing positive emotions. (npr.org)
  • Yet, previous research has found that U.S. social media users are most influenced by posts that express anger, rage and other negative emotions. (stanford.edu)
  • The researchers found that, in general, social media users in the U.S. produce more positive content (e.g. (stanford.edu)
  • In experiments exploring the hunger-anger nexus, researchers from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill found a connection between hunger and negative emotions. (uexpress.com)
  • The researchers found that the ceiling at which more money doesn't provide any more life satisfaction was $95,000, on average. (mentalfloss.com)
  • The researchers found that older adults have more positive reactions to the gain-framed messages. (illinois.edu)
  • We also found that the more positive people feel about the gain-framed messages, the more effective they feel the message is, and this relationship is stronger among older adults. (illinois.edu)
  • A number of different studies have found that happiness has a big impact on heart health, suggesting that a positive outlook can help you avoid serious illness. (chubb.com)
  • Researchers found that those whose self-assessment suggested they were happiest in the first part of the study tended to have a lower heart rate, by around six beats per minute. (chubb.com)
  • In addition to this, a 2010 study performed by researchers at the Columbia University Medical Center, US found that those who felt less anger and stress at work were less likely to develop heart disease. (chubb.com)
  • Studies have found that being more positive actually strengthens your immune system, helping your body fight off viruses and limiting the impact they have on you. (chubb.com)
  • It was found that those who had reported experiencing the nine positive emotions more throughout the two weeks prior to exposure were less likely to catch a cold, suggesting stronger immune systems. (chubb.com)
  • Researchers have found that crying while you cut onions or when you're happy doesn't provoke headaches. (healthline.com)
  • In one 2003 study , researchers found that anxiety-provoking and stressful situations were the biggest triggers for migraine and tension headaches. (healthline.com)
  • Studies have found that frogs display physiological changes in response to their environment, showing that they respond to stimuli in ways that could be considered evidence of emotion. (icran.org)
  • And the researchers found that while some were clearly linked to greater workplace success (namely: enthusiasm, assertiveness, positive emotion and dominance), others (sociability and being sensation-seeking) were not. (bps.org.uk)
  • However, another study found that for people who are particularly introverted, acting "like an extravert" - which in this case meant trying to be more excited, lively and enthusiastic - can be so exhausting that it actually increases negative emotions. (bps.org.uk)
  • Researchers have found that smoking causes chromosomal damage and speeds up aging. (medicaldaily.com)
  • Although happiness may vary between people based on personal experiences, the researchers found that life satisfaction - one of the factors that determines happiness - decreases after the age of nine and increases between the ages of 70 and 96. (medicaldaily.com)
  • It found that feeling bad did not necessarily precede increased Facebook use, but Facebook use appeared to increase before people felt worse. (theconversation.com)
  • Those who turned to online resources -- whether to share the news or gain information or support -- felt more satisfied with their treatment, the study found. (healthday.com)
  • Blacks and Hispanics were somewhat less likely to use them, the researchers found. (healthday.com)
  • Researchers have now found that the time spent in front of digital devices can affect the shape of children's brains. (medicaldaily.com)
  • In analyzing the answers, the researchers found that mindfulness did indeed lead to increased helping behavior. (mindful.org)
  • They also found that two facets of mindfulness-present-focused attention and nonjudgmental acceptance-specifically encouraged people to experience emotions like compassion, joy, or elevation during the act of helping. (mindful.org)
  • And the researchers found that shared pain not only increases a sense of solidarity, it can also boost actual group cooperation. (psychologicalscience.org)
  • The researchers found that students who had performed painful tasks as a group tended to pick higher numbers than those who performed the pain-free tasks, suggesting that they were more motivated to cooperate with the group. (psychologicalscience.org)
  • If we told ourselves that anger and sadness were bad emotions and therefore we shouldn't feel them, we would be denying ourselves a natural and healthy response. (psychologytoday.com)
  • So if we embrace sadness and anger as emotions worthy of expression, how do we express them well? (psychologytoday.com)
  • Whether it's anger or sadness or something else, healthy expressions of negative emotions have two components: First, they don't harm us or others. (psychologytoday.com)
  • So for the U.S., users are most influenced by others' high arousal negative content like anger and disgust, but for Japan, users are most influenced by others' high arousal positive states like excitement. (stanford.edu)
  • Frogs show evidence of several types of emotions in their behavior, such as happiness, fear, anger, and anxiety. (icran.org)
  • Participants were asked to rate how strongly they felt a variety of positive and negative emotions, such as cheerfulness or anger. (sleepbetter.org)
  • Researchers from four countries and six institutions-including Yale University and Harvard Business School-measured participants' positive emotions (like amusement, awe, and gratitude) and negative ones (like anger, anxiety, and sadness), considering both the level of these emotions and also their variety and abundance-what the researchers call "emodiversity. (mindful.org)
  • Psychology professor Nancy Sin, Ph.D., at the University of British Columbia wrote that when people experience something positive, "such as getting a hug or spending time in nature , they typically feel happier that day," but when they don't get enough sleep, they don't get as big a boost from these positive events. (drweil.com)
  • In an experiment with college students, those who kept a "gratitude journal," a weekly record of things they should feel grateful for, achieved better physical health, were more optimistic, exercised more regularly, and described themselves as happier than a control group of students who kept no journals but had the same overall measures of health, optimism, and exercise when the experiment began. (beliefnet.com)
  • And there too, it was the people randomly selected to give the money away who reported feeling happier. (westminsteruu.org)
  • The top emotion all the groups of women in the study said they felt at the end of the survey was relief. (cnn.com)
  • Researchers say the results of this study proves this notion is a myth. (cnn.com)
  • All the claims that negative emotions will emerge over time, a myth that has persisted for decades without any evidence to substantiate these claims, it's clear, it's just not true," said study author Corinne Rocca, an epidemiologist and assistant professor in the department of obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive sciences at the University of California , San Francisco's Advancing New Standards in Reproductive Health. (cnn.com)
  • The study noted that two experiences were mainly positive - they called these "comforting sorrow" and "sweet sorrow. (tevapharm.com)
  • We have conducted a study of about 200 children with ADHD in Australia to understand the impacts of COVID-19, both positive and negative, from the perspective of parents. (chadd.org)
  • At UC Berkeley's Greater Good Science Center, researchers study the neurobiology of positive emotions. (spiritualityhealth.com)
  • A Stanford study of Tweets by Japanese and U.S. Twitter users reveals how cultural differences in emotions influence what goes viral on Twitter. (stanford.edu)
  • To collect data, the researchers conducted an online study using a platform that was developed by Amazon. (illinois.edu)
  • In this study we asked people to rate how they feel and how effective the message is. (illinois.edu)
  • Researchers from the University of Kentucky were able to pinpoint physical benefits to a positive attitude in their nun study. (chubb.com)
  • In a 1999 study , researchers examined people's ability to recall memories after hearing a clip from a song. (refinery29.com)
  • In a study at the University of Nebraska's Behavioural Neurobiology Laboratory, researchers observed happy emotions in bullfrogs by exposing them to artificial breams or insects that they would want to eat or explore. (icran.org)
  • Researchers at the University of California, Davis, ended a study of so-called "abortion pill reversal" after several participants developed bleeding heavy enough to require hospital visits. (populationconnection.org)
  • A study led by Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers suggests that waking several times during the night is more detrimental to people's positive moods than getting the same shortened amount of sleep without interruption. (sleepbetter.org)
  • When your sleep is disrupted throughout the night, you don't have the opportunity to progress through the sleep stages to get the amount of slow-wave sleep that is key to the feeling of restoration," says study lead author Patrick Finan, Ph.D., an assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. (sleepbetter.org)
  • Finan says the study also suggests that the effects of interrupted sleep on positive mood can be cumulative, since the group differences emerged after the second night and continued the day after the third night of the study. (sleepbetter.org)
  • In one study, with toddlers, researchers offered them sweet treats and asked them to share with a cute stuffed monkey. (westminsteruu.org)
  • But according to a new study from researchers at the University of Maine, some are also able to find positive gains and growth, as they feel pride at overcoming being bullied and moving forward with their lives as young adults. (ed.gov)
  • An NIH-funded study called Intervention Nurses Start Infants Growing on Healthy Trajectories (INSIGHT), has been shown to support healthy weight in babies and lay the groundwork for positive eating habits and growing patterns later in life. (medlineplus.gov)
  • A total of 10 FGD with 70 wom- to realize aspirations to satisfy needs haviour in our country, this study aimed en, in groups of 6 to 8 females, were and to change or cope with the envi- to develop and to assess the psycho- performed. (who.int)
  • Nearly 70% said they felt they would be stigmatized if people knew they had an abortion. (cnn.com)
  • Although the emotions were a subtype of sadness, both led to a positive shift in mood in some people. (tevapharm.com)
  • In the U.S., for example, most people state that they like to feel excited, happy and positive. (stanford.edu)
  • Research has shown that Japanese people generally value different affects (emotions) which are lower in arousal (e.g., calm, equanimity) than people in the United States. (stanford.edu)
  • Mental health is as important as physical health and affects people every day in how they think, feel, and act. (apple.com)
  • The group also will embed health messages in longer discourses to test whether people can implicitly activate their emotions while reading. (illinois.edu)
  • Suppose it is in our self-interest to feel gratitude because it makes us better people. (beliefnet.com)
  • People who describe themselves as feeling grateful to others and either to God or to creation in general tend to have higher vitality and more optimism, suffer less stress, and experience fewer episodes of clinical depression than the population as a whole. (beliefnet.com)
  • Adam Smith, in his "Theory of Moral Sentiments," supposed that people who did not feel gratitude were only cheating themselves out of happiness in life. (beliefnet.com)
  • More than 20 percent of the people with chronic sinus problems report feeling depressed . (healthline.com)
  • People who've experienced a dehydration headache say the pain feels like an ache . (healthline.com)
  • Music has a strong tie to nostalgia, which is why hearing a song from the '90s can take someone directly back to elementary school, and why listening to certain Christmas songs can make people feel warm, fuzzy, and almost child-like. (refinery29.com)
  • Yes, many people have an "optimism bias" in what they say - but in their actions, they work harder to avoid pain than to get pleasure, they remember failures and rejections more than successes and kindness from others, they need at least a 5:1 ratio of positive to negative interactions for a healthy relationship, and they muzzle themselves and play smaller in life to avoid a list of dreaded experiences. (wildmind.org)
  • This concept represents one of the central elements of Positive Psychology - an emerging field which aims to help people discover their inner strengths and use them to cultivate resilience and well-being. (successconsciousness.com)
  • Out of the estimated one billion monthly active users of Facebook worldwide, the researchers looked at 82 people with an average age of 19 in Ann Arbor, Michigan. (theconversation.com)
  • a number of studies by other researchers have shown that people from Chinese and other East Asian cultures are more likely to feel both negative and positive - or "mixed emotions" - during good events, such as doing well on an exam. (seniorwomen.com)
  • People who live to 100 years have lower measures of creatinine, glucose and uric acid in their blood compared to those with a comparatively shorter lifespan, researchers say. (medicaldaily.com)
  • Resilient people need to have space to process emotions, but they don't wallow in them. (theepochtimes.com)
  • In the January issue of the journal Mindfulness , C. Daryl Cameron and Barbara Fredrickson explored if mindful qualities could help people feel good about aiding others. (mindful.org)
  • In fact, people high in general emodiversity were less likely to be depressed than people high in positive emotion alone. (mindful.org)
  • This finding puts the 'pain as social glue' hypothesis to a rigorous test, highlighting that people not only feel closer to others, but are willing to risk their own outcomes to benefit the group," says Bastian. (psychologicalscience.org)
  • To deduce emotions from the choice of words - this is what Gašić wants to teach the systems: apart from encyclopaedic knowledge, the AI researcher feeds in recordings of conversations between real people. (humboldt-foundation.de)
  • From the perspective of individual psychology, researchers have indicated that people who are prone to violence lack self-control. (lu.se)
  • Whether HRQOL varies by number of conditions has not been established, despite the research finding that multiple chronic diseases have a substantial negative effect on quality of life, not only how people feel about their lives but also the extent of their psychological distress ( 6 ). (cdc.gov)
  • For many people, shared electric scooters and bicycles are used primarily because they contribute to positive emotions - it's fun. (lu.se)
  • For many people, shared electric scooters and bicycles are used not primarily because it is convenient, or because it is considered environmentally friendly, but because it contributes to positive emotions. (lu.se)
  • From studies that span a few centuries, we now know that many mammals feel a wide range of emotions. (animalmedical.net)
  • When you combine this aspect with nostalgia, it's a no-brainer why Christmas music makes you feel such a range of emotions. (refinery29.com)
  • As animal behavior researcher Luca Melotti tells The Two-Way, this is centered on the question of "what does it mean to have a life worth living? (npr.org)
  • BRIEFER: So based on the behavior, we then classify them as emotionally positive, so which would be something that usually increase your chance of survival and that they would approach - or negative, which is where they would - situations they would avoid and which would decrease your chance of survival. (wmra.org)
  • This guide will explore the evidence, unpacking the latest discoveries in amphibian behavior and brain development to provide a comprehensive overview of how their emotions manifest in the wild. (icran.org)
  • Struggling with emotions and behavior is a normal part of growing up, and mental health can get better or worse over time. (cdc.gov)
  • But that's about it for gratitude, which has never finished high on the list of sentiments men and women are taught to cultivate, nor attracted many researchers studying elements central to psychological health. (beliefnet.com)
  • Nostalgia has psychological and physiological benefits, including boosting mood, making us more hopeful, and even making us feel warmer. (medicaldaily.com)
  • Our findings show that pain is a particularly powerful ingredient in producing bonding and cooperation between those who share painful experiences," says psychological scientist and lead researcher Brock Bastian of the University of New South Wales in Australia. (psychologicalscience.org)
  • Experiences of adversity can generate positive psychological effects alongside negative impacts. (bvsalud.org)
  • If, in the moment when the sadness welled up, I had said to myself, "this feeling is bad, so I need it to go away," I would have denied myself the important step of grieving one of the greatest losses I've ever experienced. (psychologytoday.com)
  • Did certain emotions precede increased Facebook use, or the other way around? (theconversation.com)
  • they were trying to force themselves to feel certain emotions like 'thinking positive' while trying to perform mind tricks to get themselves there. (news-medical.net)
  • New mental health features allow users to log their momentary emotions and daily moods, see valuable insights, and easily access assessments and resources. (apple.com)
  • The researchers suggest that professional intervention using visualization, mindfulness, cognitive-behavioral work and/or Acceptance Commitment Therapy, a type of psychotherapy that helps you accept difficulties, may all be useful interventions to try with this vulnerable group. (news-medical.net)
  • In previous work, University of Arizona researcher Ashley LeBaron highlighted how important it is for parents to give their children hands-on experience with money , in addition to having discussions with them about money and presenting a good financial example. (innerself.com)
  • In a 2017 article titled, "The Secret of Happiness, Feeling Good or Feeling Right," published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology General, 2,324 university students in eight countries were studied. (psychologytoday.com)
  • After observing a dozen cats with their owners, researchers Moriah Galvan and Jennifer Vonk of Oakland University noted that cats responded differently when their owners were smiling versus when they were frowning. (animalmedical.net)
  • She's at Copenhagen University and a lead researcher for the SoundWel project. (wmra.org)
  • Psychology has generally ignored the positive emotions," says Robert Emmons of the University of California at Davis, a psychologist and leading figure in the new field of gratitude research. (beliefnet.com)
  • Researchers at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts have been studying the relationship between happiness and longevity since 1938. (medscape.com)
  • NIH MedlinePlus magazine spoke with two Pennsylvania State University researchers who led this work. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Is Happiness About Feeling Good All the Time? (psychologytoday.com)
  • Happiness, according to them, is based on a variation on the pleasure principle, which states that we seek to feel less pain and more pleasure. (psychologytoday.com)
  • In fact, in the long term, suppressing our emotions works against engendering happiness and peace of mind. (psychologytoday.com)
  • As Melotti explains, they are currently at the point where they can distinguish "positive" emotions from "negative" - but not finer emotional graduations between happiness, joy and optimism, for example. (npr.org)
  • Research has demonstrated that the emotional lives of frogs may be more complex than previously thought, suggesting that they feel emotions like happiness, fear, and contentedness. (icran.org)
  • These discoveries suggest that they may possess an emotional complexity that rivals that of higher mammals when it comes to their ability to feel emotions like happiness and fear. (icran.org)
  • How crying might cause headaches isn't clear, but intense emotions, like stress and anxiety, seem to trigger processes in the brain that pave the way for headache pain. (healthline.com)
  • How does any anxiety in your temperament bias you to feel more threatened, more uneasy, more cautious than you reasonably need to be? (wildmind.org)
  • Rutgers researchers say keeping anxiety and stress to a minimum during pregnancy is important but is especially critical for high-risk pregnancies where it is believed to be a factor in premature birth. (news-medical.net)
  • Aside from anxiety or depressive symptoms, the women experienced an inherent dilemma -- needing to choose between two options and feeling that neither is good. (news-medical.net)
  • College-age women who were bullied in middle or high school continue to feel a range of negative emotions, including anxiety and lack of self-confidence, years after their experiences. (ed.gov)
  • If you've felt stuck and anxious or depressed for longer periods of time than reasonable, there are ways you can build resilience. (theepochtimes.com)
  • Almost all mothers initially felt anxious about being filmed, but reported positive experiences of the intervention, particularly valuing its non-judgemental, positive and child-focussed nature, their supportive relationship with the therapist and the insights they gained on their child. (bvsalud.org)
  • We'll investigate how frogs process emotions physiologically and explore the effects of environmental stimuli on frog psychology. (icran.org)
  • In the first experiment, the researchers randomly assigned 54 students to perform either a painful task or a similar, relatively painless, task in small groups. (psychologicalscience.org)
  • In another experiment, researchers worked with adults. (westminsteruu.org)
  • And if the unlikely event did happen and if it felt really bad, how would you cope? (wildmind.org)
  • More surprisingly, the women informed us that they did not receive explicit advice on how to cope, think positive, or calm down. (news-medical.net)
  • To try to manage their emotions, the women expended tremendous energy, leaving themselves depleted and less able to cope. (news-medical.net)
  • Second, they make us feel better, not worse about ourselves. (psychologytoday.com)
  • But you also want to give voice to your emotions in a way that doesn't harm yourself or others and will make you feel better and not worse about yourself. (psychologytoday.com)
  • Worse, the researchers reported that habitually not getting enough sleep puts us at risk of chronic inflammation and earlier death. (drweil.com)
  • Givaudan is thrilled to introduce MoodScentz®, a pioneering fragrance technologies platform guiding our perfumers and creative teams in crafting mood enhancing fragrances across all categories of perfume, to evoke positive emotions using the power of fragrance. (givaudan.com)
  • Mood research at Givaudan's Health and Wellbeing Centre of Excellence in Ashford, UK, has proved that a scent can bring a positive state of mind creating a positive mood that can bring substantial wellbeing benefits. (givaudan.com)
  • To further measure the consumers' response to different fragrances, our researchers have developed and used Mood Portraits® to uncover deeper links between fragrance and emotion through images. (givaudan.com)
  • Whether you like to feel a little bit sad or need something happy to snap you out of your holiday slump, chances are there's a Christmas song - and an accompanying Spotify playlist - to match your mood. (refinery29.com)
  • Participants subjected to eight forced awakenings and those with delayed bedtimes showed similar low positive mood and high negative mood after the first night, as measured by a standard mood assessment questionnaire administered before bedtimes. (sleepbetter.org)
  • But the researchers say significant differences emerged after the second night: The forced awakening group had a reduction of 31 percent in positive mood, while the delayed bedtime group had a decline of 12 percent compared to the first day. (sleepbetter.org)
  • Researchers add they did not find significant differences in negative mood between the two groups on any of the three days, which suggests that sleep fragmentation is especially detrimental to positive mood. (sleepbetter.org)
  • The lack of sufficient slow-wave sleep had a statistically significant association with the subjects' reduction in positive mood, the researchers say. (sleepbetter.org)
  • However, some participants felt their "genuinely negative emotions" increased with sad music. (tevapharm.com)
  • The participants felt that extraverts were better at controlling and modifying how they come across to others. (bps.org.uk)
  • One of the largest studies about women's emotions after an abortion finds most feel relieved and don't regret their choice, even if they struggled beforehand or worried about stigma. (cnn.com)
  • Previous studies have focused on negative emotions - for example, identifying how rats indicate that they are feeling pain, with the aim of learning how to avoid those situations. (npr.org)
  • And knowing when a rat is feeling positive emotions also has numerous potential applications for human researchers, especially because rats are used in many different kinds of studies. (npr.org)
  • The search for evidence that frogs are capable of feeling emotions has taken place both in the laboratory setting, where scientists are able to conduct more controlled experiments and in field studies of free-living frogs. (icran.org)
  • A massive 2019 review of 97 meta-analyses of studies exploring links between extraversion scores and workplace success concluded that the trait "confers a pervasive and robust advantage": compared with introverts, extraverts were more motivated to do well, got on better with others, felt more positively about life (including challenges at work), and got better employer evaluations. (bps.org.uk)
  • Previous studies have associated using Facebook with both positive and negative emotions. (theconversation.com)
  • Because the studies looked at Facebook use and emotions at only one point in time, it wasn't clear what the sequence of events was. (theconversation.com)
  • 46 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE: Studies show that a positive environment, such as a tidy house, can actually boost your immunity and physical health. (nxtbook.com)
  • When we feel compassion, love and understanding, the heart 'beats out' a very different message. (nxtbook.com)
  • Some songs instantly kick your emotions into high gear - whether they're happy or sad. (tevapharm.com)
  • Wondering if your pet rat is feeling happy? (npr.org)
  • After exposing 17 dogs to images of various facial expressions and tones that were either angry or happy, the animals were quickly able to recognize facial cues and the emotions behind them. (animalmedical.net)
  • So, listening to some Christmas tracks might make you feel wistful for your childhood or just generally festive and happy, rather than remorseful about that one Christmas when you got dumped, because your brain has already created positive associations with the music. (refinery29.com)
  • Nostalgia is an intriguing sensation, because it can make you feel happy and sad at the same time. (refinery29.com)
  • Can Frogs Feel Happy? (icran.org)
  • Part of what makes us feel whole, and happy. (westminsteruu.org)
  • The researchers induced positive emotions in rats to observe how their facial expression changes - by tickling them. (npr.org)
  • This lip funneler - as it is referred to by facial display researchers - can often be seen while Trump is listening and preparing to interrupt or respond to Biden. (wallstreetwindow.com)
  • The results showed indirect effects of the frequency of information about COVID-19 on its accuracy and positive affects. (bvsalud.org)
  • To try to find out, the Stanford researchers turned to social media users in a non-Western country, specifically Japan. (stanford.edu)
  • in effect, the brain is like Velcro for negative experiences but Teflon for positive ones. (wildmind.org)
  • The researchers point out that the groups, created by random assignment, did not reflect any sort of shared identity other than their task-related experiences. (psychologicalscience.org)
  • Over recent decades, psychologists have taken more of an interest in positive experiences. (lu.se)
  • Clinicians can also ask patients if they have felt a loss of interest in things they used to enjoy, and if they perhaps feel like they have less energy or can't face carrying out daily activities. (medscape.com)
  • METHODS: Forty-four qualitative interviews were conducted, including all nine mothers receiving VIPP-PMH during the pilot phase, 25 of the 34 mothers participating in the RCT (14 allocated to the VIPP-PMH arm and 9 from the control arm), 11 of the 12 clinicians delivering VIPP-PMH and one researcher. (bvsalud.org)
  • If we have experienced such impacts as adults, surely children may be feeling similar things? (chadd.org)
  • if a trial ends early due to unfavorable results or safety concerns, you may feel sad, disappointed, afraid, vulnerable or worried about what will happen next. (alz.org)
  • Many mammals, such as cats and dogs, have limbic systems (which govern emotions) that are similar to humans, as well as social structures and genetic similarities that mimic our own. (animalmedical.net)
  • Because it allows you to envision positive outcomes, a hopeful attitude creates the ideal climate for growth, fulfillment, and success. (successconsciousness.com)
  • It's incredible to see how a shift in attitude can generate so many positive outcomes. (successconsciousness.com)
  • It's about picking up on a child's signs and reacting quickly in a way that's developmentally appropriate for the child and is associated with lots of positive outcomes for children. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Researchers studied 62 healthy men and women randomly subjected to three sleep experimental conditions in an inpatient clinical research suite: three consecutive nights of either forced awakenings, delayed bedtimes or uninterrupted sleep. (sleepbetter.org)
  • There was a more negative reaction to everything that meant criticism of America, and a positive reaction to everything and everyone who demonstrated a positive attitude towards the country. (lu.se)
  • Surprisingly, the effect of emodiversity on physical health was about as strong as the effects of positive or negative emotion alone. (mindful.org)
  • In contrast, positive emotions have been associated with beneficial effects. (medscape.com)
  • Secondly, I examine the empirical results presented in the literature with respect to the proposed positive pedagogical effects. (lu.se)
  • It's important to understand that researchers have gathered important data even if the results aren't positive. (alz.org)
  • These results hold even when researchers factor out such things as age, health, and income, equalizing for the fact that the young, the well-to-do, or the hale and hearty might have "more to be grateful for. (beliefnet.com)
  • RESULTS: Mothers described feeling motivated to take part in the research and understood the need for randomisation. (bvsalud.org)
  • Melotti says one possibility is developing an automated system that determines whether a rat is in pain or feeling positive, which could be measured over time and used to improve the quality of life for the animals. (npr.org)
  • Nancy L. Sin et al, "Sleep duration and affective reactivity to stressors and positive events in daily life. (drweil.com)
  • There are times when life knocks you to the ground so hard that it almost feels like there's no point in hoping for a brighter future. (successconsciousness.com)
  • Users can scroll through engaging, multidimensional shapes and choose how they are feeling in a range from Very Pleasant to Very Unpleasant. (apple.com)
  • Human decision-making is both a conscious and non-conscious process in the brain, and while this method of research succeeded in gathering explicit (or conscious) emotions, it failed to gain the consumer's implicit (or unconscious) emotions. (wikipedia.org)
  • Now, the research team led by Kathryn Finlayson is focused on promoting positive emotions in rats - rather than simply aiming for the absence of a negative state. (npr.org)
  • The research thus far has only just begun however so there is still much more we can learn about how these surprisingly sentient animals think and feel. (icran.org)
  • However, recent research has challenged this long-held belief, displaying evidence that frog emotions can in fact exist. (icran.org)
  • One of the aims of our research platform is to be a space where researchers can discuss their ideas and possibly develop collaborations. (lu.se)
  • The parent and grandparent participants also were asked what they taught their children about the topic, ultimately providing researchers a picture of how families share financial lessons across four generations. (innerself.com)
  • There may be many positives for children with ADHD during this time. (chadd.org)
  • Much like small children, animals seem to have an uncanny way of reading our emotions, even when they're nonverbal (and 90% of communication is nonverbal). (animalmedical.net)
  • Then they made note of when the children smiled, assuming this offered insight into positive emotions. (westminsteruu.org)
  • Participants were mothers experiencing enduring difficulties in managing emotions and relationships, consistent with a 'personality disorder', and their 6- to 36-month-old children. (bvsalud.org)
  • I wanted to continue my career even after having children, so it felt reasonable and natural for me to move from Japan to Sweden rather than my husband moving from Sweden to Japan. (lu.se)
  • This is consistent with the developmental theory that older adults focus more on positive things," Liu said. (illinois.edu)
  • On the other hand, young adults feel more negative when they encounter loss-framed messages. (illinois.edu)
  • They asked 313 adults if they had recently helped someone out-and if they had, then researchers asked them how they felt while helping. (mindful.org)
  • We're supposed to feel gratitude on Thanksgiving Day, and not merely for being stuffed with delicious fowl, wine, and pies. (beliefnet.com)
  • The researchers worry that certain breast cancer patients -- especially older ones, minorities and those with lower levels of education -- will miss out on the possible benefits of going online. (healthday.com)
  • But the findings don't prove that using social media outlets like Facebook and Twitter will benefit all breast cancer patients, and the researchers expressed a note of caution. (healthday.com)
  • In terms of depression, however, it is crucial to remember that patients with depression don't always turn up feeling sad or crying, as Mohallem reminds us. (medscape.com)
  • You can boost your immune system, for example, by conjuring up positive emotions, and you can work with the heart itself to change or manage your response to a stressful experience (see panel, left). (nxtbook.com)
  • It just felt for me that a piece is missing if you don't consider culture," said lead author and graduate student Tiffany Hsu . (stanford.edu)
  • Sometimes the emotions you feel when you cry can be so intense that they lead to physical symptoms, like a headache. (healthline.com)
  • Relief was an emotion used to describe how they felt each time they were asked about it. (cnn.com)
  • They did, however, show significant differences in group bonding: Students who performed the painful tasks reported a greater degree of bonding than did those who performed the pain-free versions, even after the researchers accounted for participant age, gender, and the size of the group. (psychologicalscience.org)
  • Most parents (64%) reported that there were many positive parts of the COVID-19 pandemic, such as more time with family, being able to learn at home, being less busy and more relaxed, fewer stressors related to going to school. (chadd.org)
  • While they weren't able to think of an exact event from the time when the song came out, they were able to recall the general emotion that they felt during that time. (refinery29.com)
  • She added: 'Women also reported using all of these outlets to deal with the negative emotions and stress around their breast cancer diagnosis. (healthday.com)
  • Have you ever had a bad feeling when helping someone, like guilt or resentment? (mindful.org)
  • The researchers didn't ask participants to talk about financial giving directly, yet nearly 83 percent of them brought it up as an important part of the financial education they gave or received. (innerself.com)
  • Suppose thankfulness were not only among our most important positive emotions, but one that links directly to physical and mental well-being. (beliefnet.com)
  • In designing a future trial, a positive and non-judgemental therapeutic relationship will be important to allay mothers' anxieties about being filmed, and careful consideration should be given to the timing and accessibility of questionnaires used. (bvsalud.org)
  • It's interesting that rats show emotions on their faces, because they are not particularly visual creatures, Melotti says. (npr.org)
  • On our darkest days when all we want to do is curl up on the couch and do nothing, those of us with pets know our companions seem to sense our emotions. (animalmedical.net)
  • This innovative technique involves asking volunteers to select the visuals that represent emotions evoked by a fragrance, avoiding the use of words - eliciting a more spontaneous and discriminatory response. (givaudan.com)
  • The researchers observed Facebook use and emotional well-being in 82 volunteers over two weeks. (theconversation.com)
  • As well as measuring emotional state at both the beginning and end of the two weeks, the researchers prompted the volunteers to fill in online questionnaires about how they felt and their Facebook use throughout the fortnight, at five random times a day. (theconversation.com)
  • Even if you feel paralyzed from the trauma, find a way to overcome it by setting daily goals and making them happen. (theepochtimes.com)
  • 2019) They Say, "If You Don't Relax…You're Going to Make Something Bad Happen": Women's Emotion Management During Medically High-Risk Pregnancy. (news-medical.net)
  • Among high school students in 2019, more than 1 in 3 (36.7%) reported feeling sad or hopeless, and nearly 1 in 5 (18.8%) seriously considered attempting suicide. (cdc.gov)
  • And there's another curious thing about kindness: It's uniquely contagious, kindness researchers say. (heartmath.org)
  • But hopefulness is more than just a hot topic for curious researchers and healthcare professionals. (successconsciousness.com)
  • For each one-point increase in positive emotions, participants experienced a 22 per cent reduction in their risk of heart disease. (chubb.com)
  • The researchers selected the 15 male Lister Hooded rats that responded most positively to tickling from a larger pool of 75 rats. (npr.org)
  • Scientists now know that they can experience basic emotions such as excitement, joy, and fear. (icran.org)
  • More information on positive indicators of mental health such as emotional well-being and resilience is needed to truly understand children's mental health. (cdc.gov)
  • Researchers can identify the best indicators of mental health. (cdc.gov)
  • Helping others, showing care and avoiding violence are the kind of things that make us feel good. (lu.se)