• While drawing from methodologies from different fields, the four studies all reinforce the central finding that sadness, more than other negative emotions, increases people's craving to smoke. (harvard.edu)
  • For starters, the Bible mentions emotions within one's spirit. (cwgministries.org)
  • It involves either adjusting emotional expressions or modifying one's actual emotions. (cdc.gov)
  • Trichotillomania (hair-pulling disorder) is characterized by the persistent and excessive pulling of one's own hair, resulting in noticeable hair loss. (medscape.com)
  • Over time, the loss of neurons increasingly impairs intellectual and motor function and the regulation of emotions, resulting in the signs and symptoms of dementia with Lewy bodies. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Thus, the aim of this study was to explore whether mothers' and fathers' own DE, as measured by SCOFF questionnaire, and emotion dysregulation, as measured by the difficulties in emotion regulation scale (DERS), were associated with their daughters' or sons' DE and emotion dysregulation. (lu.se)
  • Adaptation, Emotion Regulation Checklist, validation. (bvsalud.org)
  • Damasio formulated the somatic marker hypothesis (SMH), that proposes a mechanism by which emotional processes can guide (or bias) behavior, particularly decision-making. (wikipedia.org)
  • By understanding how perception impacts consumer behavior and brand reputation, you can develop effective strategies to create lasting connections with your customers, ultimately contributing to your company's success and overall brand awareness goals. (britopian.com)
  • What role do emotions play in this addictive behavior? (harvard.edu)
  • A team of researchers based at Harvard University now has fresh insights into these questions, thanks to a set of four interwoven studies described in a new report published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences: The studies show that sadness plays an especially strong role in triggering addictive behavior relative to other negative emotions like disgust. (harvard.edu)
  • Make automatic triggers for your behavior. (stanforddaily.com)
  • In contrast, emotion expressions by extortionists had no effect on participants' behavior, revealing an important limitation of highly competitive strategies. (nature.com)
  • Behavioral finance, on the other hand, takes into consideration the role that psychology and emotions can have when making financial decisions and incorporates that behavior into decision-making. (sbnonline.com)
  • The results of not expressing feelings can be depression or negative behavior. (yourtango.com)
  • The behavior can occur during both relaxed and stressful times, but there is often a mounting sense of tension before hair pulling occurs or when attempts are made to resist the behavior. (medscape.com)
  • The trauma to the follicle occurs as a result of the patient's repetitive hair-pulling behavior. (medscape.com)
  • The studies range from analysis of data from a national survey of more than 10,000 people over 20 years to laboratory tests examining the responses of current smokers to negative emotions. (harvard.edu)
  • The conventional wisdom in the field was that any type of negative feeling, whether it's anger, disgust, stress, sadness, fear, or shame, would make individuals more likely to use an addictive drug," said lead researcher Charles A. Dorison , a Harvard Kennedy School doctoral candidate. (harvard.edu)
  • Lerner has studied the impact of emotions on decision making since the 1990s, examining issues including whether generalized negative emotions trigger substance abuse or whether a subset of specific emotions such as sadness are more important factors in addiction. (harvard.edu)
  • Notably, other negative emotions did not show the same relationship with smoking. (harvard.edu)
  • If an emotion commandeers your passion or clarity, note its value: positive or negative. (gaia.com)
  • While honoring your emotions is essential, it's best not to fuel negative emotions. (gaia.com)
  • Negative emotions tell you something, so don't ignore them. (stanforddaily.com)
  • Negative emotions increased across the workforce in 2020, with anger and stress higher for workers under 40. (gallup.com)
  • It's worth noting that negative emotions have been rising for several years for all workers prior to the pandemic. (gallup.com)
  • The research is the latest in a growing collection of studies that have linked negative emotions to excessive calorie intake and poor diet quality. (earth.com)
  • These results align with other studies that have found the negative mood to positively predict children's fatty food intake. (earth.com)
  • The results indicate that mornings and evenings are vulnerable periods when the change in negative emotions could influence food choices. (earth.com)
  • Without communication from a trusted source, negative emotions may lead to harmful individual or group behaviors. (cdc.gov)
  • Effective communication that addresses both negative and positive emotions is crucial to a successful crisis outcome. (cdc.gov)
  • Nurses must first be aware of their emotions in response to patients and coworkers, whether positive or negative. (cdc.gov)
  • For caregivers to maintain their health and continue providing care, efforts must be made to reduce the negative health effects of caregiving and provide support to caregivers for managing stress and chronic health conditions. (cdc.gov)
  • All this results in a negative feedback loop in which inflammation makes the body believe it is under threat, produces a more robust immune response, and perpetuates or exacerbates depressive symptoms. (medscape.com)
  • Some authors have advocated for the distinction between "automatic" pulling occurring during sedentary activities with little awareness and "focused" pulling in response to negative or stressful emotions, as these different styles may respond to different treatment strategies. (medscape.com)
  • Being mindful, according to Ulrich Kirk , has to do with dissociating your emotional experience of a stimulus that induces fear, anxiety or other negative emotions. (lu.se)
  • Neuroscience research in the past decades has shown that our brain gives meaning to our experiences and sensations, through concepts such as emotions. (noldus.com)
  • Even with all the technological advancements and resulting brand transformation, it may be the discoveries in neuroscience that have the largest impact about how we think about brands today. (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • They either change the blood-brain barrier, or move across the blood-brain barrier, or transmit the signal ― the information ― across the blood-brain barrier and perpetuate the depressive systems by changing the function of brain areas responsible for interpretation of emotions," said Pariante, professor of biological psychiatry at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, Kings College London. (medscape.com)
  • How do people with Parkinson's disease express emotions? (noldus.com)
  • The EmotiPlay software developed in the ASC-Inclusion project helps autistic children understand and express emotions through facial expressions, tone-of-voice and body gestures. (autismeurope.org)
  • It's quite possible that when we express emotions through laughter, yelps, and gasps, we release chemicals and electromagnetic discharges born from emotions. (gaia.com)
  • In this review, drawing on findings from behavioral economics and neuroeconomics, we firstly identify decision contexts in which emotion overrides reason to influence human behaviors and then discuss how cognition regulates emotion as well as how emotion and cognition cooperate to influence decisions. (frontiersin.org)
  • However, crises may also create positive emotions and behaviors. (cdc.gov)
  • This is the so called dilemma between "the head" (rationality) and "the heart" (emotion). (frontiersin.org)
  • The general opinion was that emotions were a base part of humanity, a vestige of our "animal" past, and that rationality was what separated Homo sapiens from other, lesser animals. (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • These findings suggest that selective reduction of emotion is at least as prejudicial for rationality as excessive emotion. (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • Can our ability to recognize and control our emotions determine how dangerous we perceive certain hazards to be and whether or not we think we are at risk? (noldus.com)
  • Another core idea is that the emotions you experience and perceive are not an inevitable consequence of your genes. (dericbownds.net)
  • We're also finding that animals can perceive these emotions in humans. (animalmedical.net)
  • The role of substance use and emotion dysregulation in predicting risk for incapacitated sexual revictimization in women: results of a prospective investigation. (duke.edu)
  • Using a prospective design, the present study examined whether emotion dysregulation, given its association with interpersonal trauma and substance use, increases risk for revictimization among women with a history of ISA above and beyond the effects of substance use. (duke.edu)
  • In a logistic regression analysis, guilt, emotion dysregulation, and marijuana use accurately classified 78.9% of ISA revictimized women. (duke.edu)
  • Findings suggest that even very small increases in emotion dysregulation, particularly in impulsivity, as well as marijuana use, impact revictimization risk substantially. (duke.edu)
  • Efficacy of interventions to reduce ISA revictimization may be improved if emotion dysregulation is addressed. (duke.edu)
  • Background: Research on the relationships between adolescent and parental disordered eating (DE) and emotion dysregulation is scarce. (lu.se)
  • Furthermore, DE was associated with emotion dysregulation among both adolescents and parents. (lu.se)
  • Adolescent and parental emotion dysregulation was associated, although there were gender differences in the specifics of this relationship. (lu.se)
  • The frequency of shared dinner meals was the only variable that was associated to DE and emotion dysregulation among adolescents, while parental eating disorder was the only variable that enhanced the probability of adolescent DE. (lu.se)
  • Conclusion: The present study contributes to the literature by demonstrating that there are significant associations between parents and their adolescent children in terms of DE, emotion dysregulation, and shared family meals. (lu.se)
  • More studies are needed for us to understand the relationship between a child's emotions and their food choices, but this is a good start on that path to recognizing how to approach food choices with a person's mood and emotions in mind," said Naya. (earth.com)
  • Based on Barrett's concept, we define emotion as a subjective, conscious experience characterized by biological reaction and mental states. (frontiersin.org)
  • This post continues with clips, paraphrase, and editing of Barrett's book " How Emotions Are Made: The Secret Life of the Brain " - material from chapter 2, and very briefly noted, Chapter 3. (dericbownds.net)
  • Loewenstein and Lerner divide emotions during decision-making into two types: those anticipating future emotions and those immediately experienced while deliberating and deciding. (wikipedia.org)
  • GREAT FOR SOCIAL EMOTIONAL LEARNING: These blocks were created to help children to understand that emotions and feelings vary amongst people, and each emotion can look different from person to person. (reallygoodstuff.com)
  • National Security Council spokesman John Kirby told reporters Tuesday that "the president understands that there's strong emotions and feelings here, all around, all across the board - and here inside the administration and the federal government, that's certainly the case as well. (yahoo.com)
  • But emotion may unwittingly be playing a role in how you invest - whether as a member of an investment committee or private investor - driving you to make decisions based not on facts but on heart and gut feelings. (sbnonline.com)
  • Your feelings need to be acknowledged and can be a guide to making decisions. (yourtango.com)
  • Because emotional labor requires effort to create expressions or to change feelings to meet employer or job expectations, it's an occupational demand on workers and can alienate them from their own true feelings, creating a sense of inauthenticity. (cdc.gov)
  • As ideas and imagery move through our minds and bodies, they bounce around like pinballs, creating, and provoking emotional responses. (gaia.com)
  • Smart Business spoke with Shannon about how emotional biases influence investments and how an expert adviser can help you recognize - and counter - them when making financial decisions. (sbnonline.com)
  • According to researchers from the universities of Lincoln and Sao Paulo, dogs can also recognize our emotions. (animalmedical.net)
  • 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)
  • Therefore, they can recognize our emotions through nonverbal and verbal means. (animalmedical.net)
  • It's another to refuse to recognize the obvious results. (fee.org)
  • Also, nurses must recognize how they may be adjusting or altering their emotions or expressions to meet organizational expectations or the needs of others. (cdc.gov)
  • Are you involved in emotion recognition and facial expression analysis? (noldus.com)
  • The results show that autistic children improved on emotion recognition and socialisation after taking the intervention, suggesting the intervention was effective in helping children learn socio-emotional skills. (autismeurope.org)
  • In Paper III we investigated the role of the locus coeruleus, as measured through fluctuations in pupil size, during the process of emotion recognition. (lu.se)
  • When the concepts involved are emotion concepts, your brain constructs instances of emotion…With concepts, your brain makes meaning of sensation, and sometimes that meaning is an emotion. (dericbownds.net)
  • We're ignoring the fact that people are experiencing multiple emotions at once and in those instances we don't know which emotion was experienced first. (r-bloggers.com)
  • Researchers from the University of Geneva (UNIGE), Switzerland, have just provided an initial answer to this question, measuring the ability of six-month-old babies to make a connection between a voice (expressing happiness or anger) and the emotional expression on a face (again, of happiness or anger). (neurosciencenews.com)
  • They were exposed to voices and faces expressing the emotions of happiness and anger. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • Based on this study, we can conclude that six-month-old babies are able to recognise the emotion of happiness regardless of these auditory or visual physical characteristics. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • The science of happiness: What makes people satisfied with their lives? (earth.com)
  • Despite increasing evidence that emotion signals influence decision making, the effects of emotion in this dilemma have been mostly neglected. (nature.com)
  • In the iterated prisoner's dilemma, two players make, in each round, a simultaneous decision to either cooperate or defect. (nature.com)
  • Anticipated (or expected) emotions are not experienced directly, but are expectations of how the person will feel once gains or losses associated with that decision are experienced. (wikipedia.org)
  • Our results indicate that these effects are mostly mediated by participants' expectations of cooperation made from the counterpart's strategy and emotion, but also by the participants' emotional experiences during the interaction. (nature.com)
  • Through observations and interviews, I identify five strategies: creating legitimacy and trust, managing expectations, regulating emotions, silencing criticism, and disclaiming other tools. (lu.se)
  • In contrast to my Chomskyan training , recent results from my lab show that social identity is not, in fact, a supplemental feature of language, but a feature that is part of every level of linguistic knowledge and use. (canadianmanufacturing.com)
  • The theory of constructed emotion, in contrast, tells a story that doesn't match your daily life-your brain invisibly constructs everything you experience, including emotions. (dericbownds.net)
  • Emotion Dynamics tells us that different emotions are highly interconnected, such that one emotion morphs into another and so on. (r-bloggers.com)
  • For example, interactions with angry, hostile, or uncooperative patients are emotionally charged and pose a greater demand on nurses to suppress or alter their emotions. (cdc.gov)
  • These findings provide insight into the value, as well as the limits, of behavioral strategies and emotion signals for cooperation. (nature.com)
  • Understanding the cognitive processes behind consumer perception is essential for building a robust brand. (britopian.com)
  • I made myself do mindfulness meditations for thirty days in a row this spring when I volunteered to take part in a study at Lund University lead by Ulrich Kirk from the Department of Psychology at the University of Southern Denmark. (lu.se)
  • Through dozens of experiments over decades, Kahneman created a new model to explain how people think and make decisions. (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • Rockefeller had built his fortune honestly, foregoing larger dividends to reinvest profits in his oil company, resulting in growth for the company and decades of falling oil prices for consumers. (fee.org)
  • In mindfulness training you instead note that 'this is how I register this emotion in my body', and that makes the emotion fade off a little bit. (lu.se)
  • What we study here is if mindfulness, in this forceful conditioning paradigm, makes you more able to dissociate yourself from the fear we trained you up on. (lu.se)
  • Mindfulness makes you not linger on to the emotion and then you are open for whatever is in the present moment, you are ready for new learnings. (lu.se)
  • In linguistics, and in cognitive science in general, the human mind is conceived of metaphorically as a computer with different algorithms for different procedures - with no reference to emotion or social context. (canadianmanufacturing.com)
  • This seems highly counterintuitive, especially given that the first formal grammar, Ashtadhyayi (circa 550 BCE), by Sanskrit grammarian Panini established the idea that language is a system of abstract rules, where these grammatical rules make no reference to emotion or social context. (canadianmanufacturing.com)
  • Your familiar emotion concepts are built-in only because you grew up in a particular social context where those emotion concepts are meaningful and useful, and your brain applies them outside your awareness to construct your experiences. (dericbownds.net)
  • Decisions made with a time delay - intertemporal choice - tend to involve different weights on outcomes depending on their delay, involving hyperbolic discounting and affective forecasting. (wikipedia.org)
  • However, from Darwin's evolutionary perspective, emotion is adaptive, guiding us to make sound decisions in uncertainty. (frontiersin.org)
  • By focusing on the right indicators, brands can make data-driven decisions, optimizing marketing programs and resource allocation. (britopian.com)
  • A well-rounded understanding of these metrics allows you to make informed decisions that directly contribute to the expansion and success of your brand. (britopian.com)
  • You'll learn how to make decisions with confidence simply by applying the question that brings clarity to life's most challenging decisions. (barnesandnoble.com)
  • You make rational decisions. (sbnonline.com)
  • Humans naturally have a greater propensity to make decisions based on emotion in times like these, and not just about investments. (sbnonline.com)
  • They know markets ebb and flow, but they are so afraid to lose that they make bad decisions to avoid a loss. (sbnonline.com)
  • Emotional biases are real in decision-making, and having a strategic, well-thought-out framework from which to make good decisions is critically important to achieving ultimate success. (sbnonline.com)
  • We now know that up to 90 percent of the decisions we make are based on emotion. (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • Our decisions are the result of less deliberate, linear, and controlled processes than we would like to believe. (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • What may be most important about Kahneman's work is his finding that most human decisions are made emotionally , and that the function of human reason is to justify those decisions after the fact. (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • We also focused on snack choices where children often make their own decisions. (earth.com)
  • They validate you and give you confidence in making decisions. (yourtango.com)
  • Regardless of this distinction, dormant emotions, harmful or not, must be encouraged to move. (gaia.com)
  • Also, decision-makers tend to compare a possible result of a decision against what could have happened, rather than to their current state: for instance, game participants who could win $1000 and end up with nothing base their disappointment on the loss of the hoped-for prize, rather than on the fact that they have no less money than they had when they began the game. (wikipedia.org)
  • The data is collected from 11,000 participants who completed daily questionnaires on the emotions they felt at a given moment. (r-bloggers.com)
  • The participants were also asked to report whether they had made any unhealthy eating choices from among fried foods, sweets, and sugary beverages over the previous two hours. (earth.com)
  • RESULTS: Forty-six of the participants were attending school, and 29 were not enrolled in school. (who.int)
  • Some participants made distinctions between mosquitoborne diseases. (cdc.gov)
  • Also, immediate emotions can be very sensitive to how vivid the possible outcome is to the decision-maker. (wikipedia.org)
  • Finally, how soon an outcome may happen impacts the related immediate emotions: the sooner the impending possible outcome, the more intense the emotion associated with that event. (wikipedia.org)
  • The noun effect means outcome or result. (vanderbilt.edu)
  • Things can compound, which will make you feel guilt when you don't want to do something. (woodtv.com)
  • They can be used to add to blocks that you already have and used for building, discussions about how the same emotion can look different on different people, or to match the emotions. (reallygoodstuff.com)
  • How do people with antisocial and psychopathic traits process emotions? (noldus.com)
  • Understanding more about emotion processing in people with antisocial personality disorder and psychopathic traits can improve interventions. (noldus.com)
  • Research shows that people are more likely to achieve a goal that they've made 20 percent of progress on than one that is only 80 percent as long. (stanforddaily.com)
  • We have been engaging with - with partners and organizations and experts and analysts and people with different perspectives, to listen to their concerns, make sure that we understand them as we develop policy," Kirby said. (yahoo.com)
  • There's a premise that people, given similar information, tend to act similarly in decision-making, but not everyone will react rationally, especially in extreme circumstances. (sbnonline.com)
  • With regret aversion, people avoid making any decision for fear of being wrong, so afraid of regret that they don't do anything. (sbnonline.com)
  • Scientists have now come up with a new technology that involves cancer diagnosis through a simple urine test using a strip of paper, making diagnosis simple and affordable for people. (medicaldaily.com)
  • And it was you, who identify yourselves with the deceptively innocuous name, "We the People," who constructed the monstrosity that now demands you take any injection it decrees and refrain from speaking any word or even thinking any thought that threatens it. (fee.org)
  • The results indicated insufficient evidence supporting that perturbation-based balance training reduces falls in the laboratory and everyday living conditions for people with stroke. (bvsalud.org)
  • INTERPRETATION: The existing evidence does not conclusively support the reduction in falls and improvements in fall risk factors resulting from perturbation-based balance training among people with stroke. (bvsalud.org)
  • The results from this, and similar studies, could be useful for helping people who have a difficulty turning off their fear response, for example people who suffers from anxiety, depression or Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD). (lu.se)
  • The results of the study revealed that six-month-olds did not have a preference for either of the emotional faces if they had already heard a neutral voice or a voice expressing anger. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • One idea is that an emotion category such as anger or disgust does not have a fingerprint. (dericbownds.net)
  • your brain uses this same process to make meaning of the sensations from inside your body-the commotion arising from your heartbeat, breathing, and other internal movements? (dericbownds.net)
  • Once your concepts enter the picture, however, those sensations may take on additional meaning… From an aching stomach, your brain can construct an instance of hunger, nausea, or mistrust…an instance of emotion. (dericbownds.net)
  • the theory of constructed emotion: In every waking moment, your brain uses past experience, organized as concepts, to guide your actions and give your sensations meaning. (dericbownds.net)
  • Learning the symbolic meanings of these sensations takes time but the wise person remembers the results, so they pay attention to them. (yourtango.com)
  • Since emotions are essentially by-products of pictures, if I want to change the emotions I am feeling, I can change the picture I am looking at internally. (cwgministries.org)
  • Essentially, it creates a greater opportunity for a stronger bond. (animalmedical.net)
  • One way of thinking holds that the mental process of decision-making is (or should be) rational: a formal process based on optimizing utility. (wikipedia.org)
  • Rational thinking and decision-making does not leave much room for emotions. (wikipedia.org)
  • However, there are presently theories and research for both rational decision-making and emotional decision-making focusing on the important role of emotions in decision-making and the mental process and logic on the important role in rational decision-making. (wikipedia.org)
  • Generally, it is the contemplation of incremental losses or gains that generates anticipated emotions in decision-makers, as opposed to their overall condition. (wikipedia.org)
  • These effects are then connected to anticipated emotions as the decision is being contemplated. (wikipedia.org)
  • Although unrelated to the decision under consideration, this type of emotion can still impact the decision-making process as an incidental influence. (wikipedia.org)
  • The intense emotions can exact a higher influence on the decision than the probabilities under consideration. (wikipedia.org)
  • Overall, these emotions are real, experienced emotions, as opposed to those anticipated while thinking about possible outcomes, and as such can very powerfully impact decision-making. (wikipedia.org)
  • The experience of emotion has a powerful influence on daily-life decision making. (frontiersin.org)
  • Following Plato's description of emotion and reason as two horses pulling us in opposite directions, modern dual-system models of decision making endorse the antagonism between reason and emotion. (frontiersin.org)
  • Decision making is perceived as the competition between an emotion system that is automatic but prone to error and a reason system that is slow but rational. (frontiersin.org)
  • Though, the exact relationship between reason and emotion remains a mystery, our daily experience leaves little doubt that both emotion and reason impact our decision making to a great extent. (frontiersin.org)
  • Decision making is often referred to as a process in which a choice is made after reflection about consequences of that choice. (frontiersin.org)
  • That is, making a decision requires knowledge about facts and values as well as involves the deliberation about consequence of the selected choice ( Bechara and Van Der Linden, 2005 ). (frontiersin.org)
  • The customer journey is the series of interactions a customer has with a brand, product, or business as they become aware of a pain point and make a purchase decision. (hubspot.com)
  • Making a confident decision about hiring (or not hiring) an advisor requires some information-gathering, plus a bit of self-reflection. (forbes.com)
  • It brings clarity and fresh insight for each decision we have to make. (barnesandnoble.com)
  • They absorbed it, because it's the lens through which we learned to evaluate every decision we made as a family. (barnesandnoble.com)
  • How do emotional biases impact financial decision-making? (sbnonline.com)
  • While emotional decision-making may work in some aspects of life, going with your gut on investments is generally misguided. (sbnonline.com)
  • almost every decision we make is based on emotion , not rational thought and measured consideration. (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • In it, Damasio reports: "Work from my laboratory has shown that emotion is integral to the process of reasoning and decision making, for worse and for better. (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • I suggested that certain levels of emotion processing probably point us to the sector of the decision-making space where our reason can operate most efficiently. (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • System 2 takes on more complicated, abstract decision making and calculations, like 435 x 23. (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • The results of this paper indicated that pupil dilation reveals the time course of decision making on emotional tasks. (lu.se)
  • For example, if my spouse is late arriving home, I can picture an automobile accident, and feel the emotion of fear, or I can ask God for His picture, and He can show me a picture in my mind of His angels surrounding the vehicle, keeping it safe, and He can speak, "All is well, they will be home soon. (cwgministries.org)
  • Notice how first and second emotion form a sort of chain - Offense to Sadness, Sadness to Disgust, Disgust to Alertness, etc. (r-bloggers.com)
  • It has created great moral anxiety," said one senior administration official. (yahoo.com)
  • One of the definitions of being depressed or having an anxiety-disorder is that you identify with the emotion. (lu.se)
  • In fact, emotions are often considered irrational occurrences that may distort reasoning. (wikipedia.org)
  • My husband has no time for his emotions, my emotions and he has told my son he was done with his "emotionalism. (cwgministries.org)
  • The announcement of the imminent layoffs, reportedly made by company executives on Wednesday during a conference call with investors and analysts, comes at a time when the California-based communications and technology company is struggling to profit from weak business in emerging markets. (ibtimes.com)
  • Our guide has several top-notch recipes as well as pro tips for getting perfect results every time. (woodtv.com)
  • Below are the headline results from TheAdvisory's 'Time to sell' benchmark study. (theadvisory.co.uk)
  • By filtering for values of 1, I remove all the zeros from the sparse matrix and I'm left with a column that includes the emotion that was experienced at the time of reporting. (r-bloggers.com)
  • Time Heist makes us wonder why Doctor Who hasn't tried to rob a bank before. (escapistmagazine.com)
  • Sharp writing, superb acting and surprising character revelations make this tightly-paced episode one of the best in a very long time. (escapistmagazine.com)
  • This may be a result of younger workers in entry-level or part-time work. (gallup.com)
  • In addition, this study reveals methodological aspects to be considered in the design of Career Education programs, such as more sessions to reach more individuals and obtain more effective results over time. (bvsalud.org)
  • The neurological evidence simply suggests that selective absence of emotion is a problem. (brandingstrategyinsider.com)
  • The results revealed that pupil size predicts the efficiency of selective attention in conditions of low perceptual load (i.e., tasks few stimuli and/or simple stimuli) but not in conditions of high perceptual load (i.e., higher number of stimuli and/or more complex stimuli). (lu.se)
  • Doing so, we might reduce the dichotomy between perceived objective and trustworthy quantitative tools versus subjective, inaccurate opinions and beliefs, and make room for alternative understandings of and approaches to leadership (development). (lu.se)
  • La validité et la fiabilité d'une traduction en arabe adaptée du questionnaire sur la qualité de vie des enfants asthmatiques (PAQLQ-A) pour les enfants égyptiens a été évaluée dans une cohorte de 103 enfants asthmatiques âgés de 8 à 16 ans. (who.int)
  • The results show statistically significant differences only between the groups and in two dimensions: Agreeableness in favor of Intervention Group A (GA) and Openness in favor of Intervention Group B (GB). (bvsalud.org)
  • while contemplation of the decision's consequences may give rise to immediate emotions, known as anticipatory or integral influences, immediate emotions can also be related to the current environment or the dispositional affect of the person. (wikipedia.org)
  • What's inevitable is that you'll have some kinds of concepts for making sense of sensory input from your body in the world because…your brain has wiring for this purpose. (dericbownds.net)
  • When the inevitable result occurred, you screamed for the government to protect you. (fee.org)
  • Why Should You Create Customer Journey Maps? (hellobar.com)
  • The most obvious reason to create customer journey maps is to better understand your customers. (hellobar.com)
  • Emotions Are Created by God and Are Good! (cwgministries.org)
  • It also happened during golf rounds when I made a good shot. (webmd.com)
  • Last Christmas" mixes and matches sci-fi horror tropes with Christmas tropes… to surprisingly good results. (escapistmagazine.com)
  • Acknowledgment of emotions is a key to good mental and emotional health. (yourtango.com)