Results 21 to 30 of about 1,066,291 (304)
Getting COVID-19: Anticipated negative emotions are worse than experienced negative emotions
When people think about negative events that may occur in the future, they tend to overestimate their emotional reactions, and these "affective forecasts" can influence their present behavior (Wilson and Gilbert, 2003). The present research examined affective forecasting for COVID-19 infection including the associations between emotions and preventive ...
Amanda J. Dillard, Brian P. Meier
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A Holistic Approach to Regulating Negative Emotions
If emotions are the link between the body and the mind, it makes sense why unregulated negative emotions (e.g., fear and anger), particularly when repressed by those who are suffering from trauma, understood as dukkha, can make them feel dissociated. The
Robert Beshara
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Put on your poker face? Neural systems supporting the anticipation for expressive suppression and cognitive reappraisal [PDF]
It is a unique human ability to regulate negative thoughts and feelings. Two well-investigated emotion-regulation strategies (ERSs), cognitive reappraisal and expressive suppression, are associated with overlapping prefrontal neural correlates, but ...
De Raedt, Rudi +2 more
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Auditory-induced negative emotions increase recognition accuracy for visual scenes under conditions of high visual interference [PDF]
The effect of emotion on memory is powerful and complex. While there seems to be agreement that emotional arousal generally increases the likelihood that events are remembered, it is somewhat disputed whether also the valence of emotions influences ...
Baumann, Oliver
core +1 more source
Emotion regulation contagion drives reduction in negative intergroup emotions
Emotions are amplified when they take place in groups. This creates a unique challenge when onewishes to regulate groups’ emotions, especially if treating every person is infeasible. One response is totreat a fraction of a group, and then hope the treatment will spread to other group members.
Michael Pinus +5 more
openaire +3 more sources
This study aimed at understanding the experiences of maintaining good dietary self-care among people with type 2 diabetes mellitus and the meaning of negative emotions in the context of dietary self-care.
Margaret Amankwah-Poku
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L’influence négative des émotions sur la cognition
In this interview given to Julien Bernard at the Collège de France on December 5th, 2012, Jon Elster provides a clearer perspective on his vision of the relationship between emotions, rationality and norms as far as motivations of action are concerned ...
Jon Elster
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Can negative emotions increase students’ plagiarism and cheating?
The challenges of higher education can be stressful, anxiety-producing, and sometimes depressing for students. Such negative emotions may influence students’ attitudes toward assessment, such as whether it is perceived as acceptable to engage in ...
Isabeau K. Tindall +3 more
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The impact of negative and positive emotions on long-term and working memory [PDF]
Emotions are a constant companion in people’s life, and most of the emotions have been characterized into either positive or negative emotions. While people are experiencing different types of emotions, their memory system and brain mechanisms will be ...
Chen Jiaqi
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The current study examines the relationship between the cognitive state of participants [healthy-early mild cognitive impairment (MCI)–late MCI], some subjective wellbeing factors (positive emotions, engagement, positive relationships, meaning in life ...
Styliani Olympia Tsormpatzoudi +4 more
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