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Classical Conditioning
Classical Conditioning

... to fear the white rat (which he did not fear previously), but other furry things as well (e.g., fur coats). Many phobias are caused by this type of association. For example, many children become anxious when visiting the dentist because previous experiences have been painful—dentists often give chil ...
Exercise and Emotional Health
Exercise and Emotional Health

... term depression. In the short term, even taking a ten minute walk can increase mood and selfesteem. In the long term, research has shown that people who stick to a regular exercise routine are less likely to see their depression return five to ten years later. Of course, if you are suffering from de ...
The Feeling of Meaning
The Feeling of Meaning

... illustrating the general theory of emotion and aesthetics — and idiographic — reflecting the specific perspective of the artist. As might be appropriate study of aesthetics, there are several ways that Cupchik’s book can be interpreted. The most straightforward way is what you might expect, and what ...
OB-09 Emotions & Values
OB-09 Emotions & Values

... Emotional Intelligence • Managers with a high level of emotional intelligence are more likely to understand how they are feeling and why • More able to effectively manage their feelings so that they do not get in the way of effective decision-making ...
Lec 15 - Instincts and emotions
Lec 15 - Instincts and emotions

... often imprecisely defined, and really amounts to strong drives. For Maslow, an instinct is something which cannot be overridden, and therefore while it may have applied to humans in the past it no longer does. Emotions We experience in our life various feelings of anger, fear, disgust, repulsion, et ...
Chapter 4 Developmental
Chapter 4 Developmental

... Identify the different types of reinforcers (will NOT need to know the major schedules of partial reinforcement. How punishment and negative reinforcement differ, and drawbacks of punishment as a behaviorcontrol technique. The importance of cognitive processes and biological predispositions in opera ...
Motivation and Emotion
Motivation and Emotion

... Develop emotional preference for stimuli to which have been unknowingly exposed . ...
chapt. 10 ppt.
chapt. 10 ppt.

... The Brain’s Role in Emotion • Activity in the limbic system is important to the experience of emotion • Control over emotional and nonemotional facial expressions. • Hemispheric Differences – right hemisphere is more active in experiencing positive emotions ...
emotion (book review) - UWE Research Repository
emotion (book review) - UWE Research Repository

... There is no single uncontested way of constructing emotion, nor does any academic discipline have exclusive rights to emotion. Both of these claims made in the book are clearly attested to through the breadth of works within this volume. This reader examines key questions about our affective lives f ...
Motivation and Emotion
Motivation and Emotion

... • measures physiological responses such as perspiration, heart rate, breathing • Problems – Anxiety, irritation, guilt have similar physiological activity • Guilty Knowledge Test – assesses physiological responses to crime scene details only known by investigators ...
Motivation and Emotion
Motivation and Emotion

... Develop emotional preference for stimuli to which have been unknowingly exposed . ...
Motivation and Emotion
Motivation and Emotion

... Injecting a person with an excitatory chemical that activates the sympathetic nervous system is likely to increase his or her subjective experience of intense fear and anxiety. Use one of the major theories of emotion to account for the effects of this chemical on a person's emotional state. Which ...
Biological Psych Emotions Limbic System Thalamus Hypothalamus
Biological Psych Emotions Limbic System Thalamus Hypothalamus

... Add stress hormone after learn, recall better (at least in rats) What amygdala does Evaluate significance of stimuli Generate emotional responses Generate hormonal secretions Generate autonomic reactions come with strong emotions Involved with? Post-traumatic stress disorder Depression Phobias Anxie ...
CLA STUDIES REQUIREMENTS CLA STUDIES_3
CLA STUDIES REQUIREMENTS CLA STUDIES_3

... In this experiment there were three hypotheses: •If a person experiences a state of physiological arousal for which they have no immediate explanation, they will label this state in terms of their “cognitive explanations” of its causes based on their current situation. •If a person experiences a sta ...
Emotion
Emotion

... helpless is harmful (lack of control). ...
Emotion
Emotion

... Inferred from goal-directed behavior. ...
Chapter 12 – Motivation and Emotion
Chapter 12 – Motivation and Emotion

... Moods – Affective responses that are typically longer-lasting than emotions and less likely to have a specific object or target Display rules – Cultural rules that govern the expression of emotion Dimensional view of emotions is concerned with “more this” and “less that” while classification is more ...
Who You Know: Prominent Psychologists (Word Associations
Who You Know: Prominent Psychologists (Word Associations

... of simple processes or elements – attempt to reveal the structure of the mind by discovering all of the basic elements of sensation and emotion) Ebbinghaus – forgetting and retention curves; effortful processing (rehearsal) required to move from STM to LTM Loftus – false memories, constructed memori ...
File
File

... EMOTION -  A set of complex reactions to stimuli involving subjective feelings, physiological arousal and observational behaviour -  All emotions have three parts: physical, behavioural and cognitive -  Emotional Intelligence ...
Self-Regulation
Self-Regulation

... – Waiting is difficult if picture is imagined as real ...
J15 Environment and working with children
J15 Environment and working with children

... children adapt to unfamiliar situations (e.g., frosh week) ...
< 1 2 3

Emotional self-regulation

Emotional self-regulation or regulation of emotion is the ability to respond to the ongoing demands of experience with the range of emotions in a manner that is socially tolerable and sufficiently flexible to permit spontaneous reactions as well as the ability to delay spontaneous reactions as needed. It can also be defined as extrinsic and intrinsic processes responsible for monitoring, evaluating, and modifying emotional reactions. Emotion self-regulation belongs to the broader set of emotion-regulation processes, which includes the regulation of one's own feelings and the regulation of other people's feelings.Emotional regulation is a complex process that involves initiating, inhibiting, or modulating one's state or behavior in a given situation – for example the subjective experience (feelings), cognitive responses (thoughts), emotion-related physiological responses (for example heart rate or hormonal activity), and emotion-related behavior (bodily actions or expressions). Functionally, emotional regulation can also refer to processes such as the tendency to focus one's attention to a task and the ability to suppress inappropriate behavior under instruction. Emotional regulation is a highly significant function in human life.Every day, people are continually exposed to a wide variety of potentially arousing stimuli. Inappropriate, extreme or unchecked emotional reactions to such stimuli could impede functional fit within society; therefore, people must engage in some form of emotion regulation almost all of the time. Generally speaking, emotional dysregulation has been defined as difficulties in controlling the influence of emotional arousal on the organization and quality of thoughts, actions, and interactions. Individuals who are emotionally dysregulated exhibit patterns of responding in which there is a mismatch between their goals, responses, and/or modes of expression, and the demands of the social environment. For example, there is a significant association between emotion dysregulation and symptoms of depression, anxiety, eating pathology, and substance abuse. Higher levels of emotion regulation are likely to be related to both high levels of social competence and the expression of socially appropriate emotions.
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