• For example, when actually experiencing physiological responses related to fear, people mislabel those responses as romantic arousal. (wikipedia.org)
  • Misattribution of arousal, which is an influence on emotion processing, can be found in multiple situations, such as romantic situations and physiological responses from exercise. (wikipedia.org)
  • An example of the possible effects of misattribution of arousal is perceiving a potential partner as more attractive because of a heightened state of physiological stress. (wikipedia.org)
  • More males contacted the female experimenter when they had just walked down the suspension bridge, which was thought to be due to their misattribution of their arousal (they believed that they were feeling sexual arousal at the sight of the female instead of feeling the leftover physiological arousal from the fear of walking across the suspension bridge). (wikipedia.org)
  • Increased blood flow is an indicator of physiological arousal. (psychologytoday.com)
  • For years, researchers have suspected that physiological arousal, such as a quickening pulse and a release of hormones in the brain, may play a key role in explaining why so many people find horror movies and haunted houses so attractive. (scitechdaily.com)
  • By comparing these self-reported experiences with the data from the heart rate monitors and surveillance cameras, the researchers were able to compare the fear-related and enjoyment-related elements of the attraction on subjective, behavioral, and physiological levels. (scitechdaily.com)
  • Such experimental setups can sometimes make it difficult to measure physiological arousal because responses may be modest in a laboratory context. (scitechdaily.com)
  • June 19, 2019 A team of researchers has examined what type of social interaction is required for people to display physiological synchrony -- mutual changes in autonomic nervous system activity. (sciencedaily.com)
  • While the participants looked at the pictures, researchers measured their physiological arousal levels based on the sweat on their skin. (bigthink.com)
  • While brands cannot trump the love we feel for a romantic partner, researchers did find participants reported stronger feelings toward brands than their own friends and physiological readings for arousal were mostly tied. (bigthink.com)
  • Some have looked at physiological arousal, such as an increased heart rate, whereas others have measured violent thoughts. (bioedonline.org)
  • While some video games enhance multitasking, visual perception and the brain's ability to process information, research has suggested that violent video games can influence aggressive behaviour, aggressive cognition and physiological arousal. (bartleby.com)
  • Gruel emphasizes his concern that violent video games causes an increase in physically aggressive behavior, physiological arousal, desensitization, low empathy, and aggressive thinking. (bartleby.com)
  • Physiological measures of subconscious arousal, for instance, tend to show up before conscious awareness that a deck of cards is stacked against us. (scienceblog.com)
  • Researchers in the SLRC are using physiological monitoring and sociometric badges to map synchronicity within a classroom. (createsend.com)
  • Physiological data is being collected from wristbands, which measure skin conductance - a marker of arousal as well as heart rate. (createsend.com)
  • Higher body temperature is a signal of physiological arousal. (forbesindia.com)
  • If you have more caffeine, that might affect your desire for variety - but it would have to be an internal boost to your physiological arousal," Gullo said. (forbesindia.com)
  • We defined work-related hypervigilance as an extreme attentiveness to and assessment of the environment for potential danger that goes along with cognitive and physiological arousal. (cdc.gov)
  • Even with the volume low, the uneven noise of television programs can cause "micro-arousals" that disrupt your sleep throughout the night. (sleepbetter.org)
  • Also, the researchers recorded more "micro-arousals" with the light on. (sleepbetter.org)
  • These micro-arousals were periods when the brain appears to be nearly awake for more than three seconds. (sleepbetter.org)
  • In psychology, misattribution of arousal is the process whereby people make a mistake in assuming what is causing them to feel aroused. (wikipedia.org)
  • Donald Dutton and Arthur Aron's study (1974) to test the causation of misattribution of arousal incorporated an attractive confederate woman to wait at the end of a bridge that was either a suspension bridge (that would induce fear) or a sturdy bridge (that would not induce fear). (wikipedia.org)
  • Fear is not the only emotion that can be a result of misattribution of arousal. (wikipedia.org)
  • One of the earlier studies that focused on misattribution of arousal was done by Schachter and Singer in 1962. (wikipedia.org)
  • This phenomenon is known as the misattribution of arousal theory ( a classic theory, Bobby tells me). (vox.com)
  • University of Virginia, Charlottesville, researchers used standard surveys to chart libido and sexual functioning in 115 women, age 23 to 45. (psychologytoday.com)
  • The researchers found that the participants reported improved sexual function including libido, arousal, lubrication, satisfaction, pain and orgasm. (huffpost.com)
  • Another famous Ayurvedic medicine for boosting libido, fenugreek, can increase sexual arousal. (allconsuming.net)
  • Researchers can't say for sure if it's the fenugreek compounds that raise libido or the supplement's other components. (allconsuming.net)
  • Today, medical professionals characterize the condition as a merged term for hypoactive sexual desire disorder , a condition where you have no sex drive or low libido, and female sexual arousal disorder after reviewing data that suggests that the distinction between sexual arousal and responsiveness may be difficult to assess. (everydayhealth.com)
  • 3. Genital and subjective sexual arousal in postmenopausal women: influence of laboratory-induced hyperventilation. (huffpost.com)
  • The researchers found increased subjective and genital arousal with erotic imagery in the premenopausal and menopausal groups. (huffpost.com)
  • This study, published in the Archives of Sexual Behavior , showed hyperventilation and erotic imagery increased genital excitement in sexually functional women and women with Combined Sexual Arousal Disorder (SAD) but not those with Heterogeneous SAD. (huffpost.com)
  • Although there is a shortage of research on female sexual health, sexual concordance, the relationship between genital response and sexual arousal, has been pointed to as one potential factor in female sexual arousal and interest disorder. (everydayhealth.com)
  • The program was based on SentiStrength, which scored short English text by positivity and negativity, as well as its emotional intensity/arousal. (stanford.edu)
  • Arousal is linked to the amount of energy and intensity in the music," says David M. Greenberg, a researcher at Bar-Ilan University and the University of Cambridge. (texarkanagazette.com)
  • Basically you get with the beat of the music," says Foster, who's been leading researchers at the University of Wisconsin in their studies of music and exercise intensity for the past eight years. (acefitness.org)
  • Very few of these studies have specifically looked at how memories are affected by the level of repulsiveness (or attractiveness), which is termed "valence," and the level of emotional intensity, called "arousal," involved in the experiences, according to a statement by lead researcher Dr. Marc Lavoie, a psychiatrist at the Louis-H Lafontaine Hospital in Montreal. (livescience.com)
  • Emotion is first classified into one of the quadrants from four quadrants of emotion by comparing with the referential mean and then depending on the intensity of arousal the emotion is further classified into 12 subtypes by using the MIN Max range. (researchsquare.com)
  • Video images of each infant's face and torso during the procedure provided information on facial expression, crying time and intensity, breathing patterns, arm movements, and state of arousal, which are all part of the Neonatal Infant Pain Scale (NIPS). (medscape.com)
  • Swedish researchers have reported that women's sexual fantasies and interest in sex, erotic art, and buff, muscular men all increase around the time of ovulation. (psychologytoday.com)
  • Mental health issues such as anxiety and depression can contribute to low or no sexual arousal or interest in sex. (everydayhealth.com)
  • One model outlines three dimensions of musical attributes: arousal, valence and depth. (texarkanagazette.com)
  • Forget classifications like rock, country, and jazz - it's time to think in terms of arousal, valence, and depth. (stanford.edu)
  • A statistical analysis of the judges' opinions revealed that the differences between this diverse set of musical samples could be reduced to three main dimensions: arousal, valence, and depth. (stanford.edu)
  • The song is considered low on arousal with its slow tempo and soft vocals, it has a negative valence because of its sad lyrics, and it rates high on depth because of the complex emotion conveyed by the harmony and Mitchell's expressiveness. (stanford.edu)
  • The researchers analyzed how quickly and accurately the participants responded to figure out which factors - valence or arousal - had the greatest influence on their memory . (livescience.com)
  • Taking the speed and accuracy scores together, the researchers found that women remembered pleasant images (high valence) more efficiently than unpleasant images, regardless of how arousing the images were. (livescience.com)
  • Our findings demonstrate the complexity of emotional memory and underscore the importance of taking valence, arousal and sex differences into account when examining brain activity," Lavoie said. (livescience.com)
  • There is some evidence in the psychological literature that so-called arousal transfer effects can occur if two stimuli are processed consecutively. (medicalnewstoday.com)
  • There were no significant differences on either bridge when the researchers used a male confederate to give the Thematic Apperception Test and his phone number for any further questions about the experiment. (wikipedia.org)
  • A new study led by researchers from the Oberta University of Catalonia (UOC) in Barcelona has found that music's beneficial effect on memory may be modulated by interindividual differences. (medscape.com)
  • The researchers found that music's positive effects on memory were modulated by differences between patients regarding the use of music in their lives. (medscape.com)
  • These findings led the researchers to conclude , "Researchers require prudence before transferring interpersonal love theories and scales directly to brand-love research, without accounting for differences in the emotional nature of brand love and interpersonal love. (bigthink.com)
  • In accordance with these differences in sleep latency and wake after sleep onset, we observed large differences in sleep efficiency (86.97% vs 71.06%) and total sleep time (6.95 vs 5.70 h)," the researchers reported. (clinicaladvisor.com)
  • These differences have long intrigued researchers and largely have been characterized in the brain areas and neurochemical systems affecting the sleep and wake states. (cdc.gov)
  • Dutch researchers showed erotic videos to 20 women whose genitals were wired to detect blood flow. (psychologytoday.com)
  • The researchers recorded a "surge" in interest in the erotic films as the women approached ovulation. (psychologytoday.com)
  • Researchers from the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada, showed neutral and erotic film segments to 71 sexually-functional premenopausal and menopausal women. (huffpost.com)
  • Furthermore, arousal was greater only in the premenopausal group after hyperventilation with erotic imagery. (huffpost.com)
  • What they found is the more likely you are to binge watch, the more issues you have with sleep arousal, insomnia and, of course, focus and feeling tired the next day. (fox7austin.com)
  • However, according to the researchers, the contributing role of poor sleep hygiene practices in insomnia has not been well established. (humangivens.com)
  • Among the latter, the only area of sleep hygiene that correlated with insomnia severity and sleep quality was arousal-related behaviour. (humangivens.com)
  • Cognitive arousal has also been linked to an elevated risk for insomnia comorbidities such as anxiety, depression, and cardiovascular disease. (clinicaladvisor.com)
  • Researchers sought to explore the associations of cognitive arousal with objective nocturnal wakefulness and indicators of physiologic hyperarousal in both healthy sleepers and those with insomnia . (clinicaladvisor.com)
  • Patients with insomnia disorder reported higher levels of nocturnal cognitive arousal while trying to fall asleep on the adaptation night and baseline night compared to healthy sleepers. (clinicaladvisor.com)
  • Insomnia diagnosis, depression, and somatic arousal were not associated with any of the PSG sleep parameters or MSLT latency. (clinicaladvisor.com)
  • A critical finding from our study is that nocturnal cognitive arousal was more robustly associated with nocturnal wake and indicators of hyperarousal than insomnia diagnosis, depressive symptoms, or even self-reported presleep somatic arousal," concluded the authors. (clinicaladvisor.com)
  • As insomnia patients endorse high levels of cognitive arousal, our data suggest that ruminative thinking could potentially be an important active ingredient in insomnia with regard to objective sleep disturbance and 24-[hour] hyperarousal. (clinicaladvisor.com)
  • The researchers also studied the participants in real time through closed-circuit monitors inside the attraction. (scitechdaily.com)
  • According to a new study, as many as 1 in 7 people may have this disorder, properly known as "confusional arousal," which can lead to confused or inappropriate behavior - such as answering the phone when an alarm goes off - or even violence. (foxnews.com)
  • The researchers found that among those who'd had an episode of sleep drunkenness, 70 percent also had a sleep disorder, and 37 percent had a mental illness. (foxnews.com)
  • People suffering from depression, bipolar disorder, alcoholism, panic or post-traumatic stress disorder and anxiety seemed more susceptible to the disorder, as did those with sleep apnea , a disorder in which a person briefly stops breathing during sleep, the researchers said. (foxnews.com)
  • 4. Laboratory-induced hyperventilation differentiates female sexual arousal disorder subtypes. (huffpost.com)
  • What Is Female Sexual Interest and Arousal Disorder? (everydayhealth.com)
  • Female sexual interest and arousal disorder (FSIAD), formerly known as sexual arousal disorder in women, is a type of sexual dysfunction or problem in which there is little to no interest in sexual activity and no response to physical or mental stimulation. (everydayhealth.com)
  • Until recently, this type of sexual dysfunction was called female sexual arousal disorder, a condition in which women have trouble getting physically aroused. (everydayhealth.com)
  • Researchers stated that there are a lot of sexual disorders, for instance: Desire disorders, Arousal disorder, Orgasmic disorder, and Pain disorder. (bartleby.com)
  • 1981) investigated this phenomenon and found that those in an unrelated aroused state will rate an attractive confederate more highly than a rater without arousal. (wikipedia.org)
  • The researchers also found that aroused raters would dislike an unattractive confederate more than those without arousal. (wikipedia.org)
  • This was interpreted by the researchers to mean that the men found the woman more attractive when they had more anxiety about crossing the bridge. (wikipedia.org)
  • The researchers found that the women exposed to sexually arousing material found activities that might otherwise seem sexually disgusting, such as touching seemingly used condoms, significantly less nasty than the other participants. (livescience.com)
  • The researchers found that, in general, social media users in the U.S. produce more positive content (e.g. (stanford.edu)
  • What was even more unusual, the researchers found, the bears' body temperatures changed cyclically over multiple days. (scientificamerican.com)
  • They found that women were more likely to experience sexual nonconcordance, where their minds were unaware of the arousal response occurring in their genitals or vice versa. (everydayhealth.com)
  • Punk and heavy metal songs such as "White Knuckles" by Five Finger Death Punch were high on arousal, a study conducted by Greenberg and other researchers found. (texarkanagazette.com)
  • Researchers at Brighton and Sussex Medical School (BSMS) found that playing 'natural sounds' affected the bodily systems that control the flight-or-fright and rest-digest autonomic nervous systems, with associated effects in the resting activity of the brain. (sciencedaily.com)
  • In a series of interviews with 60 other participants, researchers found that people spoke of their affection for a brand as something more of an exchange, like: What can this brand give me that other brands can't? (bigthink.com)
  • In various studies dating back to the 1970s, researchers found that when people are in anxiety-inducing situations, they are more likely to be aroused by those around them. (vox.com)
  • Similarly, in laboratory studies, some researchers have found an increase of about four percent in gamers' levels of aggression after playing violent video games. (bartleby.com)
  • One study found that general exercise immediately before sexual activity improved the arousal of women taking antidepressants. (healthline.com)
  • The problem, researchers found, is something known as sleep arousal. (fox7austin.com)
  • 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)
  • Researchers found that women with any type of migraine are at an increased risk of developing overall breast cancer, especially estrogen-receptor breast cancer. (medicaldaily.com)
  • The researchers also found that mobile apps which are informational in nature or utilitarian were more likely to engage users than those where the app focused on entertainment or gaming. (iu.edu)
  • The researchers also measured the students' body temperature, and found it tended to be higher later in the day. (forbesindia.com)
  • We found arousal level is driving this variety preference effect," Gullo said. (forbesindia.com)
  • With experience, stimulation of one or all of these triggering zones are integrated into a 'whole' set of sensory inputs, movements, body positions, arousals and cues related to context," Pfaus says. (eurekalert.org)
  • Before viewing the film segments, participants self-inserted a vaginal probe to measure arousal. (huffpost.com)
  • Students who share the same arousal responses at the same times are sharing some common state such as common engagement or social connection," explains Associate Professor Ross Cunnington from the Queensland Brain Institute and School of Psychology at The University of Queensland. (createsend.com)
  • In a follow-up study, researchers asked the women a series of questions to gauge the impact of submissive behavior on arousal. (news-medical.net)
  • The researchers plan a series of papers on the topic of how conformity to traditional gender roles affect men and women's sexual behavior. (news-medical.net)
  • The spontaneously awake state can be defined as a natural state of vigilance or arousal differing from natural sleep in both behavior and neural activity. (cdc.gov)
  • The researchers told the participants in their study that they were testing how their vision responded to a shot of vitamins called Suproxin. (wikipedia.org)
  • A new study by researchers from Austria suggests that listening to music may "prompt" women to find male faces more attractive. (medicalnewstoday.com)
  • Our study provides some of the first empirical evidence on the relationship between fear, enjoyment, and physical arousal in recreational forms of fear. (scitechdaily.com)
  • The study was performed in collaboration with researchers from Sant Pau Hospital, Concordia University in Canada, and the Gregorio Marañón Health Research Institute in Madrid. (medscape.com)
  • In the study, the researchers interviewed a random sample of more than 19,000 American adults about their sleep habits and history of confusional arousal, as well as any mental illness and any medications they were taking. (foxnews.com)
  • In the study, about 20 percent of people who reported getting less than 6 hours of sleep per night reported having an episode, and 15 percent of those who got at least 9 hours per night said the same, the researchers said. (foxnews.com)
  • The study by British and Italian researchers, which will appear in the journal Heart , shows that listening to music with a slow or meditative tempo has a relaxing effect on people, slowing breathing and heart rate. (abc.net.au)
  • BPS reported on a study Tobias Langner and his team of researchers did, having a group of 20 participants look at a series of pictures, which included the logo of a brand they said they "loved," a photo of their significant other, and a close friend. (bigthink.com)
  • Researchers study both auditory selective attention and visual selective attention. (allpsychologycareers.com)
  • The very personal nature of mobile phones, including the new smartphones, which are practically extensions of their owners, means that advertisers need to adopt new rules of conversation with mobile phone users," said the research study, co-authored by Potter and four researchers at Murdoch University in Australia. (iu.edu)
  • His lab is interested in teasing apart the mechanisms of sleep and arousal, and applications of neuroscience in engineering and the study of intelligence. (worldsciencefestival.com)
  • Doctors specializing in sexual dysfunction rule out any other physical or psychological reasons to explain the lack of sexual arousal or interest. (everydayhealth.com)
  • An international team of researchers is developing a new way of conducting psychological and social research. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Royal Holloway, University of London has joined an international team of researchers to develop a new way of conducting psychological and social research. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Difficulty in falling asleep, shorter sleep time, frequent arousal and awakenings, or non-restorative sleep are the most common manifestations. (nih.gov)
  • Key findings show that women implicitly associate sex with submission and that this leads to a submissive sexual role, which in turn leads to lower arousal and difficulty becoming aroused. (news-medical.net)
  • As such, FSIAD is meant to be an umbrella term for all of these symptoms since physical arousal and sexual desire are closely related. (everydayhealth.com)
  • Symptoms include a decrease in sexual desire, diminished arousal response, lack of sexual intimacy in a relationship, little sensation in the genitals, little pleasure during sex, rarely thinking about sex. (everydayhealth.com)
  • Some researchers have provided evidence of a positive association between poorer subjective sleep quality and increased severity and frequency in gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms in those with IBS. (nih.gov)
  • Turns out, sexual arousal can make an icky experience less icky, researchers report Sept. 12, 2012. (livescience.com)
  • For women, chasing away the stomach-churning emotion may be as easy as seeking sexual arousal. (livescience.com)
  • But new research raises the interesting question of how a vital but potentially icky activity such as sex can seem pleasant and doable.Perhaps it's because sexual arousal somehow dampens the natural disgust response. (livescience.com)
  • From a clinical angle, these findings give us insight into important problems of sexual arousal and sexual pain disorders - for example, vaginismus and dyspareunia," researcher Charmaine Borg, a psychologist at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands, told LiveScience. (livescience.com)
  • Perhaps in women with sexual dysfunctions such as dyspareunia or vaginismus, arousal does not impact on disgust," Borg said. (livescience.com)
  • Australian researchers asked 173 college-age women to rate their arousal to various sexual fantasies. (psychologytoday.com)
  • Broad also cited two studies that investigated the effects of hyperventilation (fast breathing) on sexual arousal and sexual disorders . (huffpost.com)
  • For women with low sex drive, daily consumption of fenugreek extract may help increase their sexual desire and arousal response. (allconsuming.net)
  • Researchers recorded the results of 104 young adults (42 men and 62 women) after exposing them to a film with sexual content. (everydayhealth.com)
  • U-M researchers Amy Kiefer, Diana Sanchez and Oscar Ybarra conducted four studies to reach the conclusions in the paper, "Sexual Submissiveness in Woman: Costs for Sexual Autonomy and Arousal," scheduled to appear in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin next year. (news-medical.net)
  • This association appears to lower their arousal by reducing their sexual autonomy. (news-medical.net)
  • The more women reported engaging in submissive behaviors, the less arousal they reported experiencing from a range of sexual activities. (news-medical.net)
  • Some researchers say that playing 'shoot 'em up' video games is directly linked to kids' aggressive behaviour in the real world. (bioedonline.org)
  • That's in part because researchers have used different measures of aggressive behaviour, and different definitions of what makes for a violent game. (bioedonline.org)
  • 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)
  • The researchers noted that the women who had listened to music tended to rate male faces as more attractive and were more likely to say that they would consider dating them. (medicalnewstoday.com)
  • Researchers at the University of Rhode Island recruited 96 college-age women who were asked to rate their interest in four types of films: comedies, romances, action-adventure, and erotica. (psychologytoday.com)
  • Arizona State University researchers asked 236 women to keep diaries tracking their masturbation . (psychologytoday.com)
  • Researchers in Canada videotaped 19 women as they walked down a street during ovulation and menstruation. (psychologytoday.com)
  • The ingredients of desire may differ for men and women, but researchers have revealed some surprising similarities. (scienceblogs.com)
  • Researchers assessed insulin sensitivity in women to find out the reason behind increased food cravings right before a period. (medicaldaily.com)
  • The world-wide results obtained will help researchers to advance their understanding of how the brain recognises words and could ultimately help in understanding disorders such as dyslexia. (sciencedaily.com)
  • By understanding circadian rhythms, researchers may be able to create treatments for sleep disorders and reduce associated health problems. (nih.gov)
  • Previous studies have reported that "high-arousal" music may boost performance in memory tasks. (medscape.com)
  • The processing of the first stimulus produces internal arousal, […] which is then attributed to the second stimulus. (medicalnewstoday.com)
  • The investigators report that listening to music initially produces varying levels of arousal - accelerated breathing, increased blood pressure and heart rate - that are directly proportional to the tempo of the music and perhaps the complexity of the rhythm. (abc.net.au)
  • One of the initial studies looking into this phenomenon conducted by Schachter and Singer (1962) was based on the idea that the experience of arousal could be ambiguous and therefore misattributed to an incorrect stimulus. (wikipedia.org)
  • The results from the studies of individuals with little to no attention provides researchers with data needed to extrapolate the ways in which normal attention mechanisms operate. (allpsychologycareers.com)
  • The researchers conducted four studies. (forbesindia.com)
  • By investigating how humans derive pleasure from fear, we find that there seems to be a 'sweet spot' where enjoyment is maximized," said Marc Malmdorf Andersen, a researcher at the Interacting Minds Center at Aarhus University and lead author of the paper. (scitechdaily.com)
  • Researchers already know that our subconscious minds sometimes know more than our conscious minds. (scienceblog.com)
  • Our data revealed that during newborn circumcision, all interventions provided better pain relief than EMLA alone," the researchers conclude. (medscape.com)
  • Confusional arousal is different from the normal sleepiness that most people feel when they wake up, said Dr. Alan Manevitz, a clinical psychiatrist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York who was not involved with the research. (foxnews.com)
  • 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)
  • People have a different kind of love for their brands, the researchers report. (bigthink.com)
  • This phenomenon is sometimes called "presentiment," as in "sensing the future," but Mossbridge said she and other researchers are not sure whether people are really sensing the future. (scienceblog.com)
  • Researchers from the Samsung Medical Center of Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine in Seoul, South Korea, had 10 healthy people sleep for two nights while machines assessed changes in their heart rate, breathing and brain and muscle activity. (sleepbetter.org)
  • The many people who attended the ACER Excellence in Professional Practice Conference in Sydney last month would have had the opportunity to peruse the SLRC research projects on display at the SLRC exhibit and meet with the researchers. (createsend.com)
  • The researchers fitted each participant with a heart rate monitor, which recorded real-time data as they walked through the attraction. (scitechdaily.com)
  • With the increase in violent video games, researchers noted that the average time children and adolescents played video games also increased. (bartleby.com)
  • The researchers tracked what time zone the participants were in and when they took the survey. (forbesindia.com)
  • The source of the affectively disruptive content is not yet clear, but the fact that it is often accompanied by propaganda or misinformation suggests that it could come from nefarious actors or even algorithms, according to the researchers. (stanford.edu)
  • Operating under this assumption, the researchers developed the two factor theory of emotion. (wikipedia.org)
  • There are many reasons which are attracting the attention of researchers to intensively work on emotion detection areas. (researchsquare.com)
  • In fact, the researchers noted "a high level of stability [in arousal] across the menstrual cycle. (psychologytoday.com)
  • Therefore, in experiment three, the authors tested two conditions: low-arousal and high-arousal. (medscape.com)
  • For the high-arousal scenario, the authors looked for music that was more arousing and less relaxing. (medscape.com)
  • this procedure continues to be performed without a proper, standardized pain management strategy," the researchers write. (medscape.com)
  • The researchers then either told the participants the effects of the epinephrine, said nothing about any potential effects of the epinephrine, or told them they may feel some effects that had nothing to do with the epinephrine (for example, the researchers told the participants they could experience a headache from the shot). (wikipedia.org)
  • The results support a growing body of research on the potential stress-reducing health benefits of music, the researchers say. (abc.net.au)
  • Darwin's ideas were never proven true, but now, researchers from the University of Vienna and the University of Innsbruck, both in Austria, have decided to build on this hypothesis and test whether it - and how much of it - could actually be rooted in psychosocial and biological mechanisms. (medicalnewstoday.com)
  • Researchers from Guru Gobind Singh-Indrapastha University in New Delhi, India, administered yoga to 65 men (ages 24 to 60 years old) enrolled in a yoga camp. (huffpost.com)
  • Dr. Diederick Niehorster is a researcher and research engineer at the Lund University Humanities Lab and the Department of Psychology, Lund University. (lu.se)
  • The answer may lie in your personality, although other factors also play a role, researchers say. (texarkanagazette.com)
  • The description of participant characteristics before deployment combined with future longitudinal data analysis may allow researchers to identify modifiable multisystem risk and resilience factors for combat-related PTSD. (cdc.gov)
  • Interactions between researchers and educators is invaluable, as it is your involvement and input that ensures the Centre research remains on track and relevant. (createsend.com)
  • Based on site visits of three facilities, interviews with CO's, feedback from researchers in Industrial and Organizational psychology, and past research, we developed a nine-item scale to measure work-related hypervigilance (Sample item: "I had to be on guard to stay safe. (cdc.gov)
  • The researchers and commentators have disclosed no relevant financial relationships. (medscape.com)