Results 251 to 260 of about 839,223 (312)

Emotion regulation in acceptance and commitment therapy

Journal of Clinical Psychology, 2001
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) offers an alternative to traditional psychotherapies designed to regulate affect. ACT is based on the premise that normal cognitive processes distort and enhance the experience of unpleasant emotion, leading clients to engage in problematic behaviors designed to avoid or attenuate those unpleasant emotions.
J T, Blackledge, S C, Hayes
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Emotional Display Rules and Emotional Labor: The Moderating Role of Commitment.

Journal of Applied Psychology, 2005
The authors examined whether commitment to emotional display rules is a necessary condition for emotional display rules to affect behavior at work. Results using structural equation modeling revealed that display rule commitment moderated the relationships of emotional display rule perceptions with surface acting, deep acting, and positive affective ...
Robin H, Gosserand, James M, Diefendorff
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Trust, Emotional Commitments and Reputation

2022
How did our uniquely human commitments to our loved ones develop, and why are we so concerned about what feelings lie underneath what other people do? In this chapter, we consider the origins of our long-term emotional connections based on trust, and how they lead to uniquely human sensitivities to what motivates other people and how they feel about us.
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Antecedents of Emotional Display Rule Commitment

Human Performance, 2008
This study examined the antecedents of commitment to emotional display rules for customer service employees in typical and incivility customer service interactions. Results showed that expectancy and valence were unique predictors of the commitment to display positive emotions to customers in typical customer interaction scenarios, whereas expectancy ...
James M. Diefendorff, Meredith H. Croyle
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The socioeconomics of emotional commitments

The Journal of Socio-Economics, 1993
Abstract The article establishes the limits of emotions in promoting efficiency. The article uses a model of joint production to analyze three pairings of emotions: mutual benevolence, benevolence-malevolence, and mutual malevolence. The analysis suggests that the economic performance of an emotion depends on which emotion it is paired with.
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