• A person with autism may have trouble with everyday activities, problems with behaviors or emotions, and have questions about their general health and well-being. (cdc.gov)
  • Additionally, it evaluates the relationships between stress and emotions on health behaviors. (cdc.gov)
  • Structural equation modeling evaluated relationships between stress/emotion and health behaviors. (cdc.gov)
  • As stress was a poor predictor of health behaviors and responses to stress and negatively worded emotions were non-normally distributed it may suggests correctional employees are under-reporting stress and negative emotions. (cdc.gov)
  • Results Alcoholic beverages vary in the types of emotions individuals report they elicit, with spirits more frequently eliciting emotional changes of all types. (bmj.com)
  • By age 3, children understand that certain events, such as birthday parties, can elicit certain emotions, such as joy. (wikiversity.org)
  • By 3 years of age, children understand that certain situations can elicit certain emotions (Lane et al. (wikiversity.org)
  • One of the most immediate and noticeable effects of movies on our lives is their ability to elicit a wide range of emotions. (theoklahomatimes.com)
  • If our goal is to understand how mainstream viewers experience films, if we want to explore the cultural role of movies, if we wish to expand our conception of the poetics of the cinema, then we cannot ignore the place of emotion elicitation and affective experience within film viewing. (blogspot.com)
  • Main outcome measures Positive and negative emotions associated with consumption of different alcoholic beverages (energised, relaxed, sexy, confident, tired, aggressive, ill, restless and tearful) over the past 12 months in different settings. (bmj.com)
  • The odds of feeling the majority of positive and negative emotions also remained highest among dependent drinkers irrespective of setting. (bmj.com)
  • Land-use conflicts in Sweden have been increasingly marked by affective polarization between actor groups, i.e. a growing difference between positive and negative emotions attached to viewpoints and values on land use issues. (lu.se)
  • PDF) Age Differences in Brain Activity during Emotion Processing: Reflections of Age-Related Decline or Increased Emotion Regulation? (researchgate.net)
  • Throughout childhood, children develop emotion understanding, emotion regulation , and theory of mind . (wikiversity.org)
  • Music offers a resource for emotion regulation . (psychologytoday.com)
  • Since emotion dysregulation is associated with both victimization and depression, we developed an internet-based Emotion Regulation Training (iERT) to reduce revictimization in depressed patients. (amsterdamumc.org)
  • This study aimed to assess emotional regulation in adolescents in relation to their age and gender. (frontiersin.org)
  • The adolescents completed the Cognitive Emotion Regulation Questionnaire and the FEEL-KJ questionnaire. (frontiersin.org)
  • Girls reported higher scores on the use of emotional regulation strategies when experiencing sadness, anxiety and anger than boys, and on the overall average of regulation according to these specific emotions. (frontiersin.org)
  • Age, but not gender, had a major effect on scores for the latent variable of emotion regulation. (frontiersin.org)
  • An interaction effect between age and gender was identified in the latent emotion regulation scores. (frontiersin.org)
  • One of the most widely used definitions of emotional regulation is proposed by Gross (2015) which refers to "all those processes through which people influence the emotions they have, when they have them and how they experience and express them. (frontiersin.org)
  • Differences in regulation and emotional expression according to gender have been a topic of much study in scientific literature. (frontiersin.org)
  • Trait mindfulness (i.e., nonjudgmental and nonavoidant present-moment awareness) and cognitive emotion regulation (i.e., cognitive processing, or responding to, emotionally arousing situations) are two proposed mechanisms that may underpin pediatric misophonia and associated. (lu.se)
  • More severe misophonia was significantly associated with decreased levels of both trait mindfulness and adaptive functioning across domains, in addition to deficits in certain facets of cognitive emotion regulation, particularly self-blame. (lu.se)
  • Neither trait mindfulness nor facets of cognitive emotion regulation moderated the association between misophonia severity and adaptive functioning across domains, with the notable exception that difficulties with adaptive functioning in peer relationships was attenuated in those high in mindfulness. (lu.se)
  • Findings suggest that trait mindfulness- and to a lesser extent cognitive emotion regulation- may be potentially relevant processes in pediatric misophonia. (lu.se)
  • Using online methods in multiple languages, the Global Drug Survey 2016 included unique questions on alcohol consumption and emotions related to consuming different types of alcohol. (bmj.com)
  • A study that investigated psychological impact of the 2013-2016 Ebola outbreak showed a wide spectrum of psychosocial consequences on individual, community and international levels (7). (who.int)
  • Emotions are mental states brought on by neurophysiological changes, variously associated with thoughts, feelings, behavioral responses, and a degree of pleasure or displeasure . (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • Thus, emotions have been described as consisting of a coordinated set of responses, which may include verbal, physiological , behavioral, and neural mechanisms. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • We tested whether emotions could be decoded from fMRI signals evoked by the fractal stimuli using a classifier trained on the responses to the emotional stimuli (and vice versa). (jneurosci.org)
  • Multidimensional scaling analysis of the activation patterns revealed clear clustering of responses by emotion across stimulus types. (jneurosci.org)
  • Responses to stress and negatively worded emotions were non-normally distributed whereas responses to positively-worded emotions were normally distributed. (cdc.gov)
  • We were interested to examine how individual differences about justice and fairness are represented in the brain to better understand the contribution of emotion and cognition in moral judgment," explained lead author Jean Decety, the Irving B. Harris Professor of Psychology and Psychiatry. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Tinnitus-on the interplay between emotion and cognition. (bvsalud.org)
  • Here, we aim to outline the close link between cognition and emotion , and how current research from the field of cognitive neuroscience examines the processing and acquisition of emotional stimuli. (bvsalud.org)
  • In fact, people who choose not to express their feelings after such an event may be better off than those who do talk about their feelings, said University at Buffalo psychologist Mark Seery, lead author of the study detailed in the June issue of the Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology . (livescience.com)
  • Seery says the results should not be interpreted to mean that expressing one's thoughts and feelings is harmful or that if someone wants to express their emotions they should not do so. (livescience.com)
  • Overall hope is the most powerful emotion - with the study discovering positive perceptions and feelings of control lead to enjoyment of learning, desire for success, and pride in accomplishment. (webindia123.com)
  • Feeling: not all feelings include emotion, such as the feeling of knowing. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • In the context of emotion, feelings are best understood as a subjective representation of emotions, private to the individual experiencing them. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • Women more frequently reported feeling all emotions when drinking alcohol, apart from feelings of aggression. (bmj.com)
  • When children create imaginary worlds and role play with dolls, they communicate at first out loud and then internalize the message about others' thoughts, emotions and feelings," said researcher Dr. Sarah Gerson. (businesswire.com)
  • In the south, we process emotions & feelings about that identity. (6seconds.org)
  • In their EQ training, many of the counselors talk about how they've become detached from their own emotions… and in the training, they reconnect with their own feelings. (6seconds.org)
  • We currently recognise that emotions are historically contingent, shaped by cultural scripts that teach people how to feel and the appropriate way to display such feelings. (edu.au)
  • Contrary to expectations regarding norms for emotions in collectivistic cultures, Africa-specific norms for emotions included a large class of people who found all negative emotions undesirable. (springer.com)
  • The Facebook study revealed that when the number of positive posts in a user's news feed was reduced, the user posted fewer positive posts and more negative posts. (digitalnewsasia.com)
  • Facebook cited this finding, among others in the same research, as evidence that social networks can spread "emotional contagion," or the wide-scale transfer of positive or negative emotions between users. (digitalnewsasia.com)
  • The aims of this study are to assess the levels of perceived threat (susceptibility, severity, impact), negative emotions (fear, worry), and self-efficacy of pregnant women in China related to COVID-19 and to examine their associations with mental health (depression and anxiety) and personal protective behavior (wearing a face mask). (jmir.org)
  • They found that both meditation types produced significant reductions in worry while the focused meditation group had less interference effects during the attentional task and self-compassion meditation produced significant reductions in anxiety, perceived stress, and depression, significant increases in positive emotions and course performance, and less reaction in the EEG to negative emotional words. (contemplative-studies.org)
  • Of note, the decline in memory of mixed emotions is distinct from the pattern found for memory of negative emotions, implying that the recall bias is diagnostic of the complexity of mixed emotions rather than of any association with negative affect. (stanford.edu)
  • In line with our expectations, the patients participating in the emotion-focused therapy showed an increased activation and connectivity of the amygdala post-intervention compared to the patients receiving the cognitive-behavioral intervention, which may reflect improved emotion processing and increased tolerance towards negative emotions,' said Dr. Meyer. (news-medical.net)
  • Hence, this study examines conflict intensity as a moderator of the relationship between interpersonal conflict and perceived stress , physical symptoms, and job satisfaction, through negative affect. (cdc.gov)
  • I use psychological methods, eyetracking devices as well as functionnal magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to study such processes. (unige.ch)
  • Using a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) brain-scanning device, the team studied what happened in the participants' brains as they judged videos depicting behavior that was morally good or bad. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Led by Kristina Meyer, PhD, and Catherine Hindi Attar, PhD, at Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, in Berlin, Germany, the researchers investigated the impact of two psychotherapeutic interventions on BD symptoms and on amygdala activation and connectivity with other emotion-related brain regions using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). (news-medical.net)
  • Cameron Carter, MD, Editor of Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging , said of the work, 'This study, which uses task fMRI to engage specific brain circuits affected by bipolar disorder before and after different forms of therapy, reveals new insights regarding their mechanisms of action in the brain. (news-medical.net)
  • After successful learning, fMRI signals were recorded during the presentations of emotional stimuli and emotion-associated fractals. (jneurosci.org)
  • Although the model might seem abstract at first sight, it shows how achievement emotions relate to critically important parts of our lives and can define how we perform in job interviews, tests and other stressful situations. (webindia123.com)
  • Recent neuroimaging studies indicate that several brain regions represent emotions at an abstract level, i.e., independently from the sensory cues from which they are perceived (e.g., face, body, or voice stimuli). (jneurosci.org)
  • If emotions are indeed represented at such an abstract level, then these abstract representations should also be activated by the memory of an emotional event. (jneurosci.org)
  • Memories are one of the important ways in which musical events evoke emotions. (psychologytoday.com)
  • Music doesn't only evoke emotions at the individual level, but also at the interpersonal and intergroup level. (psychologytoday.com)
  • These findings provide evidence that involuntary facial expressions can evoke emotions, and suggest that the brain mechanisms involved in experiencing emotions are also used in understanding the emotional content of language. (scienceblogs.com)
  • Eid, M.: 2001, 'Advanced statistical methods for the study of appraisal and emotional reaction', in K. R. Scherer and A. Schorr (eds), Appraisal processes in emotion: Theory, methods, research (Oxford University Press, Oxford), pp. 319-349. (springer.com)
  • dblp: A Study of Subjective Emotions, Self-Regulatory Processes, and Learning Gains: Are Pedagogical Agents Effective in Fostering Learning? (uni-trier.de)
  • Further research can provide greater understandings about both the individual and social processes by which leisure can contribute to (or be a detriment to) more holistic understandings of emotions. (idrottsforum.org)
  • The new study used brain scans to analyze the thought processes of people with high "justice sensitivity. (sciencedaily.com)
  • However, more research is needed to uncover the precise nature of these processes to aid future characterization and intervention efforts, especially in light of equivocal findings in the present study. (lu.se)
  • Study suggests interparental conflict causes lasting damage in the way children are able to recognize and process emotions. (madinamerica.com)
  • The results of a study from the University of Vermont suggest that even forms of maltreatment that are less severe than abuse and neglect can have lasting effects on children's ability to process emotions. (madinamerica.com)
  • Further, Dr. Seth Pollak and his team linked the presence of childhood abuse and neglect with a poor ability to identify and process emotions. (madinamerica.com)
  • Through these conversations, children learn what emotions are, how to process emotions, how to regulate emotions, and how to appropriately display emotions. (wikiversity.org)
  • Explains Alice Schermerhorn, an assistant professor in the University of Vermont's Department of Psychological Sciences and lead author of the current study. (madinamerica.com)
  • The psychological study involved students from several universities and the general adult population. (webindia123.com)
  • Where emotions have been directly referred to within the wide world of leisure research, most commonly in relation to sport, there is typically an overreliance on psychological perspectives of emotion. (idrottsforum.org)
  • Being able to understand and regulate emotions effectively can affect social competence, psychological well-being, cognitive functioning and moral sensitivity (Thompson, 2011). (wikiversity.org)
  • A study due to be published in the journal Psychological Science suggests that by doing so, it impairs the ability to process the emotional content of language, and may diminish the quality of emotional experiences. (scienceblogs.com)
  • Research has begun to examine the underlying psychological mechanisms of misophonia in adults, but studies in youth are limited. (lu.se)
  • According to these studies, psychological disorders found in populations possibly exposed to hazardous substances are similar to those found in communities that have experienced natural disasters: heightened incidence of anxiety, clinical depression, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). (cdc.gov)
  • Many more of the studies of psychological effects rely on self reports, and there are differences of opinion on what is scientific evidence. (cdc.gov)
  • Norms for experiencing emotions were analyzed for 1,056 participants from five African nations (Ghana, Nigeria, South Africa, Tanzania, and Zimbabwe) in a cross-cultural study. (springer.com)
  • After exposure to the photos for a brief period of time participants were asked to identify which emotion the couple exhibited given the three options. (madinamerica.com)
  • Gimmelmann stressed that this claim misses the point because for an observational study, automated data processing may be a meaningful way of avoiding privacy harms to research subjects but that is because "in an observational study, the principal risks to participants come from being observed by the wrong eyes. (digitalnewsasia.com)
  • The study tracked self-reported emotion ratings from 142 participants every day over 75 days through an online survey. (michigandaily.com)
  • In the 90-minute video sessions, facilitators lead a group of eight to 12 participants through a combination of educational videos, discussion, and skill-building with tools like acronyms and mnemonic devices to learn how to label their emotions and identify common thinking traps. (ucalgary.ca)
  • The goal, researchers say, is for the participants to develop non-judgmental attitudes toward themselves and to learn how to be less critical and more empathetic of their emotions. (ucalgary.ca)
  • To learn whether interventions to counter reasoning- or emotion-based techniques are more effective, or whether the approaches are complementary, we evaluate three distinct versions of a five-day, low-cost, and scalable text message educational course in a field experiment with approximately 9,000 participants in Kenya. (stanford.edu)
  • In one study, participants listened to their favorite songs after taking naltrexone. (psychologytoday.com)
  • As expected, study participants who scored high on the justice sensitivity questionnaire assigned significantly more blame when they were evaluating scenes of harm, Decety said. (sciencedaily.com)
  • In a study published in 2007, they covertly manipulated facial expressions by asking participants to hold a pen either in their teeth, to simulate smiling, or between their lips, to prevent them from smiling. (scienceblogs.com)
  • Supporting and expanding an emotion-centered model of conflict , results indicated that the indirect effects of conflict on the study's outcomes were higher when participants perceived the conflict to be of medium and high-level intensity. (cdc.gov)
  • Recruited participants were paid 35 dollars to participate in the study. (cdc.gov)
  • To better understand what happens when participants accept false feedback about their choices ongoing projects are using a number of measures other than self-report to study choice blindness, including eye-movements, pupil dilation and mouse-arm movements. (lu.se)
  • A total of 420 participants were recruited in the study with a male to female ratio of 1:1.5 and mean age of 40.4±10.0 years. (who.int)
  • The Unified Protocol (UP) is a cognitive behavioural therapy program that moves away from disease-specific or diagnosis-specific treatment to use a technique that targets the unifying features of mental illnesses, mainly the distress associated with intense emotions. (ucalgary.ca)
  • Despite the fact that physical health and cognitive abilities decline with aging, the ability to regulate emotion remains stable and in some aspects improves across the adult life span. (researchgate.net)
  • Based on evidence for structural and functional preservation of the amygdala in older adults and findings that older adults show greater prefrontal cortex activity than younger adults while engaging in emotion-processing tasks, we argue that the cognitive control hypothesis is a more likely explanation for older adults' positivity effect than the aging-brain model. (researchgate.net)
  • People in the study also completed questionnaires that assessed cognitive and emotional empathy, as well as their justice sensitivity. (sciencedaily.com)
  • The aim of this study was to assess the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of mindfulness meditation for ADHD, executive functioning (EF), and emotion dysregulation symptoms in an adult ADHD sample. (nih.gov)
  • In addition, self-reported ADHD and EF symptoms (assessed in the laboratory and ecological momentary assessment), clinician ratings of ADHD and EF symptoms, and self-reported emotion dysregulation improved for the treatment group relative to the waitlist group over time with large effect sizes. (nih.gov)
  • Secondary outcome measures and mediators include emotion dysregulation and depressive symptomatology. (amsterdamumc.org)
  • During this workshop four scholars working in the field of early modern studies will reflect on current issues in the history of emotions. (huizingainstituut.nl)
  • [10] The ever-changing actions of individuals and their mood variations were of great importance to most Western philosophers, including Aristotle , Plato , Descartes , Aquinas , Machiavelli , Spinoza , and Hobbes , leading them to propose extensive theories-often competing theories-that sought to explain emotion and the accompanying motivators of human action, as well as its consequences. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • In this sense, studies on emotional expression collect different theories regarding the why of these gender differences. (frontiersin.org)
  • Bramsen has done research on peace diplomacy, emotions, conflict theories, nonviolent resistance, Nordic cooperation on peace and conflict resolution as well as on Women Peace and Security. (lu.se)
  • Ekman, P.: 1972, 'Universals and cultural differences in facial expressions of emotion', in J. Cole (ed. (springer.com)
  • By the age of 2, most children can correctly identify basic emotions with clear facial expressions, such as happiness and sadness (Van Der Pol et al. (wikiversity.org)
  • Darwin believed that facial expressions are indeed important for experiencing emotions. (scienceblogs.com)
  • Other researchers have shown that reading words describing emotions can activate the muscles involved in producing the facial expressions associated with those emotions. (scienceblogs.com)
  • The results may suggest that botox can impair emotional reactivity, but this is by no means conclusive, and the news stories completely overlook the more profound implication of the results - that by paralyzing the muscles involved in producing facial expressions, botox may actually diminish the experience of emotion in those who use it. (scienceblogs.com)
  • This year's holiday ads are also continuing 2020's trend away from humorous emotions, owing to the pandemic and the contentious U.S. election. (marketingdive.com)
  • Critics argued that while the Facebook study may not have crossed lines of legality, it certainly breached the ethical and moral responsibilities the social network site ought to have for its users. (digitalnewsasia.com)
  • Instead they felt other things - 'passions', 'accidents of the soul', 'moral sentiments' - and explained them very differently from how we understand emotions today. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • Our results suggest that PCC, precuneus, and MPFC contain representations of emotions that can be evoked by stimuli that carry emotional information themselves or by stimuli that evoke memories of emotional stimuli, while angular gyrus is more likely to take part in emotional memory retrieval. (jneurosci.org)
  • Stimuli in different sensory modalities such as an emotional face or voice can arouse emotions, but emotions can also be triggered by the memory of a past emotional event, for example, a song reminiscent of a romantic episode. (jneurosci.org)
  • In particular, prefrontal regions are involved in the acquisition and evaluation of emotional stimuli as also shown in studies of patients with affect disorders. (bvsalud.org)
  • The Merriam-Webster definition of emotion is "a conscious mental reaction (such as anger or fear) subjectively experienced as strong feeling usually directed toward a specific object and typically accompanied by physiological and behavioral changes in the body. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • By the age of 5, children are able to identify complex emotions, such as anger, fear, disgust and shame (Van Der Pol et al. (wikiversity.org)
  • Emotions are often intertwined with the mood, temperament, personality , disposition, or creativity of the individual experiencing the emotion. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) potentially can help to identify whether lithium is likely to be effective or if other medication such as atypical antipsychotic medication or antiepileptic medication will be more likely effective in bipolar disorder to stabilize mood. (medscape.com)
  • This project is an important first step to better understand and treat anxiety disorders, by measuring brain and behavioral aspects of anxiety and emotion in both parents and children. (walkforhope.com)
  • This is an important first step to begin connecting the dots between anxiety and emotion across the parent-child dyads and lay the foundation for a program of research to provide interventions for children and families struggling with ADs. (walkforhope.com)
  • This project will quantify both anxiety and emotion using a multimodal assessment that spans parent report, self-report, behavioral, and neurophysiological measures to examine anxiety and emotional processing in 25 preschool children and their parents. (walkforhope.com)
  • To help as many students as possible, the team has condensed the UP program into five online sessions called Managing Anxiety and Intense Emotions. (ucalgary.ca)
  • We still need to study the best approaches, but we believe that affectionate communication ranging from hugs, touching, or even the posture taken during communication -- can make a positive impact, even if it only relieves anxiety. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Basic research uses several animal models for the study of acute or chronic pain, as well as for the study of the main comorbidities arising from their chronicity, such as anxiety and depression. (bvsalud.org)
  • In this study, we aimed to estimate the prevalence of quarantine-related anxiety and its socioeconomic correlates. (who.int)
  • T he purpose of this special issue is to draw attention to the social and political nature of emotions experienced within leisure, and encourage critical scholarship around the associated theoretical, methodological, and applied issues of emotions within contemporary leisure contexts. (idrottsforum.org)
  • This special issue intends to spark a revival of emotional discussions (and discussions about emotions) in leisure by drawing from a wide range of contexts, theoretical perspectives, and methodological considerations. (idrottsforum.org)
  • Central to this work has been the idea that the ways in which emotions are experienced are powerfully shaped and mediated by cultural-historical contexts. (huizingainstituut.nl)
  • It then look at what emotion talk is, the different contexts mothers use to engage in emotion talk, and the benefits of emotion talk. (wikiversity.org)
  • What are the three contexts mothers use talk to children about emotions? (wikiversity.org)
  • 2015). They also have greater emotion understanding, as they recognise that people may express emotions which are different to how they are really feeling (Lane et al. (wikiversity.org)
  • Results demonstrated that the intensity of mixed emotions is generally underestimated at the time of recall-an effect that increases over time and does not occur to the same degree with unipolar emotions. (stanford.edu)
  • Outcome studies show that compared with unipolar depression, bipolar disorder causes more work disability and overall poorer outcome 15 years after an index hospitalized manic episode even when mania is in remission for at least 1 year. (medscape.com)
  • Belgian researchers have confirmed that sadness lasts longer than other emotions, from happiness to 'let the ground open up and swallow me now please' humiliation. (shinyshiny.tv)
  • The law professor also attacked the fact that Facebook claimed that no text was seen by human researchers, as the study used advanced software algorithms to gain its insights. (digitalnewsasia.com)
  • In the study's second year, researchers investigated the importance of what kids say while they play and found children use increased language about others' thoughts and emotions when playing alone with dolls. (businesswire.com)
  • Facebook researchers showed that emotions can be contagious, so to speak, thereby validating what artists, marketers, and demagogues have known since the development of language and communication. (informationweek.com)
  • Other research, specifically a study conducted by researchers at the University of Michigan, has already suggested that Facebook use makes people unhappy with their lives and undermines social well-being. (informationweek.com)
  • The researchers found that when study subjects took naltrexone, they reported that their favorite songs were no longer pleasurable (Malik et al. (psychologytoday.com)
  • This method allows facilitators to work with a large volume of people experiencing a range of emotions and provide them with a toolkit that lasts beyond the sessions so they can continue to regulate themselves and learn to ease those stresses. (ucalgary.ca)
  • In one intervention, 28 patients underwent an emotion-focused therapy where they were guided to perceive and label their emotions without avoidance or suppression. (news-medical.net)
  • Diener, E., C. K. Scollon, S. Oishi, V. Dzokoto and E. M. Suh: 2000, 'Positivity andthe construction of life satisfaction judgments: Global happiness is not the sum of its parts', Journal of Happiness Studies 1, pp. 159-176. (springer.com)
  • Emotions associated with high levels of rumination will last longest,' Verduyn says, which I suppose means that if we want to feel happier, we should probably be thinking about happiness a LOT. (shinyshiny.tv)
  • A new study, published in the Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, investigates the effect of interparental conflict on children's emotion recognition. (madinamerica.com)
  • Children from high conflict homes are less able to identify neutral emotions, an inaccuracy that may attribute to hypervigilance. (madinamerica.com)
  • Whereas previous studies have primarily examined links between emotion recognition and children's exposure to physical abuse and neglect, in the current study, we examined links with interparental conflict. (madinamerica.com)
  • However, less is known about the much more common occurrence of the effects everyday interparental conflict has on children's emotion recognition. (madinamerica.com)
  • Outcomes of the large northeastern US study consistently revealed children from low conflict home accurately identifying scenes with the correct emotion and children from high conflict homes inconsistently identifying emotion portrayed in the photos. (madinamerica.com)
  • Children from high conflict homes were able to identify happy and angry emotions with accuracy, but less accurate in recognizing neutral expressions, labeling them as either happy , angry , or saying they did not know which category they fit into. (madinamerica.com)
  • In the current study, shyness was shown to compound the effects of exposure to parental conflict leading children to be more uncertain of the photos displaying neutral emotions. (madinamerica.com)
  • Shy children were less able to identify the actor's emotions, even when they were from low conflict homes. (madinamerica.com)
  • Whereas shy children from high conflict homes demonstrated greater inaccuracy in emotion identification than their counterparts who were also from high conflict homes. (madinamerica.com)
  • In closing, this study provides a significant contribution to the field by demonstrating that even low levels of conflict in the home can have lasting effects on children's ability to interpret and identify emotions. (madinamerica.com)
  • Finally, the memory decay effect was driven by the felt conflict aroused by the experience of mixed emotions. (stanford.edu)
  • Emotion understanding is the ability to identify emotions, understand what caused the emotional response, understand that what people display and feel can be different, and identify the cultural rules about displaying emotions (Blankson, O' Brien, Leerkes, Marcovitch, & Calkins, 2011). (wikiversity.org)
  • Mindfulness meditation training is garnering increasing empirical interest as an intervention for ADHD in adulthood, although no studies of mindfulness as a standalone treatment have included a sample composed entirely of adults with ADHD or a comparison group. (nih.gov)
  • I joined the Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies as a Post-Doctoral Fellow in July 2021. (lu.se)
  • Socialisation of children's emotions is primarily achieved through conversations, particularly between mothers and children (Aznar & Tenenbaum, 2019). (wikiversity.org)
  • Strategies that could be used include those mentioned above, as well as data pooling to look for common themes, reviewing and learning from occupational health studies of stress, and creating and instituting rapid assessment tools to assess the problem swiftly. (cdc.gov)
  • Correctional employees (n=317) completed physical assessments to measure body mass index (BMI), and surveys to assess perceived stress, emotions, and health behavior (diet, exercise, and sleep quality). (cdc.gov)
  • Objectives To examine the emotions associated with drinking different types of alcohol, explore whether these emotions differ by sociodemographics and alcohol dependency and whether the emotions associated with different drink types influence people's choice of drinks in different settings. (bmj.com)
  • Internal state language can indicate that a child is thinking about other people's thoughts and emotions while playing with dolls," said researcher Dr. Sarah Gerson. (businesswire.com)
  • Other methods, like retrospective reports, can be inaccurate because people have a hard time remembering their emotions over the past week or month. (michigandaily.com)
  • Weigard also acknowledged that it's difficult to get people to finish research tasks on a daily basis and keep them in the study. (michigandaily.com)
  • Every person has some level of alexithymia, as it is the personality trait which keeps people from sharing or even understanding their own emotions. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Colin Hesse, an assistant professor of communication in the MU College of Arts and Science, said previous studies estimate 8 to 10 percent of people suffer from high alexithymia. (sciencedaily.com)
  • They also understand that other people may have different emotions to what they would experience in a similar situation. (wikiversity.org)
  • Working with emotions can be particularly effective because many people are not emotionally literate. (studyemotions.com)
  • A study about the effect of posts on Facebook users' emotions outraged some people. (informationweek.com)
  • People who care about justice are swayed more by reason than emotion, according to new brain scan research. (sciencedaily.com)
  • People who care about justice are swayed more by reason than emotion. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Debra Dell, coordinator of the Youth Solvent Action Committee, YSAC, has seen first hand that healing is possible - she says that at the core, the work is about reconnecting people to themselves in spirit, emotion, mind, and body… the four directions of the Medicine Wheel. (6seconds.org)
  • EASD Genetic Research Informs on Timing of Type 1 Diabetes Development Two studies point to possible improvements in predicting which autoantibody-positive people might progress to type 1 diabetes and in distinguishing between types in adult-onset diabetes. (medscape.com)
  • people do not like to feel their emotions. (cdc.gov)
  • Studies of the Val108/158Met polymorphism in people with schizophrenia have had mixed results. (medlineplus.gov)
  • While most studies report no evidence of heightened risk with either methionine or valine at this position, some studies have found a slightly increased risk of schizophrenia in people with valine at position 108/158. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Ekman, P. and K. G. Heider: 1988, 'The universality of a contempt expression: A replication', Motivation & Emotion 12, pp. 303-308. (springer.com)
  • In The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals , he wrote that "the free expression by outward signs of an emotion intensifies it. (scienceblogs.com)
  • In this chapter, I outline dynamic models of motivation and emotion. (lehigh.edu)
  • I studied psychology and neuroscience in the University of Geneva. (unige.ch)
  • The paper - published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology - scientifically identified the 12 emotions that fuel and impact success. (webindia123.com)
  • Study leader Professor Reinhard Pekrun, from Essex's Department of Psychology, said: "This is the first study that has developed a 3D model for success emotions. (webindia123.com)
  • Dr. Adriene Beltz, U-M assistant professor of psychology and lead researcher of the paper, said her team was interested in how emotion fluctuates on a daily basis. (michigandaily.com)
  • Rackham student Dominic Kelly, a graduate student working in Beltz's lab, said this study is unique compared to other development studies in psychology because it uses an intensive longitudinal study rather than a traditional longitudinal study. (michigandaily.com)
  • We're proud that when children play out stories with Barbie and vocalize their thoughts and emotions, they may be building crucial social skills, like empathy, that give them the tools needed to be confident, inclusive adults," said Lisa McKnight, Senior Vice President and Global Head of Barbie and Dolls, Mattel. (businesswire.com)
  • Eshun, S.: 1999, 'Cultural variations in hopelessness, optimism, andsuicidal ideation: A study of Ghana and U. S. college samples', Cross-Cultural Research: The Journal of Comparative Social Science, 33, pp. 227-238. (springer.com)
  • She said she hopes research about gender in medical studies continues and this paper is a first step in the right positive direction. (michigandaily.com)
  • If you're doing a study, you have to justify why you might not be included in the group and we're basically saying there's not a lot of evidence for this being an appropriate justification for excluding females from any kind of research that has to do with emotions. (michigandaily.com)
  • The latest research found children talked more about others' thoughts and emotions, a concept known as internal state language (ISL), when playing with dolls than while playing tablet games. (businesswire.com)
  • Expressed emotion (EE) is a rating of criticism, hostility, and emotional over-involvement from a carer towards a person experiencing mental distress. (ntu.ac.uk)
  • The emotions experienced within and invested into leisure are some of the main reasons for our engagement with leisure throughout our lives. (idrottsforum.org)
  • Hesse's previous work has shown that affectionate communication releases hormones that relieve stress, and his future studies will be applicable to all forms of communication. (sciencedaily.com)
  • This study assesses underreporting of stress and emotions. (cdc.gov)
  • Stress and emotion survey items were evaluated for under-reporting via skewness, kurtosis, and visual assessment of histograms. (cdc.gov)
  • EL SEGUNDO, Calif.--( BUSINESS WIRE )--Mattel, Inc. (NASDAQ: MAT) announced that Barbie and a team of neuroscientists at Cardiff University have released the latest findings from a multi-year study exploring the short and long-term developmental impacts of doll play. (businesswire.com)
  • The media have overstated the findings of this study, by reporting that botox can damage relationships and cause those that use it to lose friends . (scienceblogs.com)
  • An early study suggests that more frequent aspirin dosing might up antiplatelet protection in patients with type 2 diabetes, but these lab findings require verification in clinical studies. (medscape.com)
  • Rather than perceive affect and emotion as developing outward from the inner organs as Henri Bergson , William James , or Carl Lange had suggested, Tomkins and his colleagues Carrol Izard and Paul Ekman focused mostly on the face as "an organ for the maximal transmission of information, to the self and to others" and concluded that "the information it transmits is largely concerned with affects. (blogspot.com)
  • of all outward signs softens our emotions. (scienceblogs.com)
  • Emotions can be aroused by various kinds of stimulus modalities. (jneurosci.org)
  • however, other work shows that emotions are important for the spread of and belief in misinformation, supporting a focus on the second hypothesis and emotion-based techniques. (stanford.edu)
  • The Facebook study concluded that "Emotions expressed by friends, via online social networks, influence our own moods, constituting, to our knowledge, the first experimental evidence for massive-scale emotional contagion via social networks. (digitalnewsasia.com)
  • Conclusion Understanding emotions associated with alcohol consumption is imperative to addressing alcohol misuse, providing insight into what emotions influence drink choice between different groups in the population. (bmj.com)
  • What influence does gender and cultural background have on emotion talk? (wikiversity.org)
  • The pattern of results seen using this approach also provides a unique form of validation for the clinical approach used, by establishing a link between the theoretical model motivating the emotion-focused intervention and its effects in the brain. (news-medical.net)
  • Discussion: This study is the first to examine the effectiveness of an intervention aimed at reducing violent revictimization in depressed patients. (amsterdamumc.org)
  • Subjective tinnitus (hereafter tinnitus ) is often considered and studied as a perceptual phenomenon. (bvsalud.org)
  • How do we even begin to visualize and draw connections between the intimately complex relationship that exists between food and emotion? (uva.nl)
  • David Havas of the University of Wisconsin-Madison and his colleagues have been investigating the relationship between emotion and language. (scienceblogs.com)
  • This study aims to evaluate the clinical and cost-effectiveness of iERT added to Treatment As Usual (TAU) in reducing incidents of violent revictimization among depressed patients with a recent history of victimization. (amsterdamumc.org)
  • Furthermore, this study aims to examine secondary clinical outcomes, and moderators and mediators that may be associated with treatment outcomes. (amsterdamumc.org)
  • Breaking up can be tough on the heart, but it's not as emotionally taxing as we would predict, a study finds. (livescience.com)
  • The aim of the current study was to evaluate the impact of an educational programme on knowledge, beliefs, practices and expectations towards glaucoma and eye care among adolescent patients with glaucoma. (who.int)
  • Some simple methods of The study was conducted at the oph- incorrect beliefs and attitudes to- self-care are available to patients with thalmology outpatient clinics in Ain wards glaucoma (the effect of night- glaucoma. (who.int)