The Impact of Intergroup Emotions on Forgiveness in Northern
... Wohl and Brancombe (2005) maintain that the resolution of social conflict involves more than just changing negative beliefs; it is also necessary to see the humanity in the other. Their research demonstrated that perpetrator groups that are seen as ‘human’ elicit intergroup forgiveness and more posi ...
... Wohl and Brancombe (2005) maintain that the resolution of social conflict involves more than just changing negative beliefs; it is also necessary to see the humanity in the other. Their research demonstrated that perpetrator groups that are seen as ‘human’ elicit intergroup forgiveness and more posi ...
Shame in Two Cultures: Implications for
... Study 1 – The Prominence of Shame in Everyday Life Bengkulu was selected as a study site on the basis of the impression that concern with malu, an emotion term reasonably translated as ‘shame’ (Echols, Shadily, Collins & Wolff, 1989; Fontaine et al., 2002; Goddard, 1996), is an important part of lif ...
... Study 1 – The Prominence of Shame in Everyday Life Bengkulu was selected as a study site on the basis of the impression that concern with malu, an emotion term reasonably translated as ‘shame’ (Echols, Shadily, Collins & Wolff, 1989; Fontaine et al., 2002; Goddard, 1996), is an important part of lif ...
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... such as the amygdala (LeDoux, 2000) whereas conscious recognition of emotion appears to require additional cortical resources (e.g. the orbitofrontal cortex; Kawasaki et al., 2001). The fact that nonverbal behaviour is perceived and processed non-consciously suggests that people may be influenced by ...
... such as the amygdala (LeDoux, 2000) whereas conscious recognition of emotion appears to require additional cortical resources (e.g. the orbitofrontal cortex; Kawasaki et al., 2001). The fact that nonverbal behaviour is perceived and processed non-consciously suggests that people may be influenced by ...
Negative Jealousy-Related Emotion Rumination
... engaged, and .3% did not respond. Those reporting being single and not dating or dating many individuals were excluded from the testing of the hypotheses and research question. For cross-sex friend respondents (n ¼ 118), 18% reported that their friends were former romantic partners, 70% said they we ...
... engaged, and .3% did not respond. Those reporting being single and not dating or dating many individuals were excluded from the testing of the hypotheses and research question. For cross-sex friend respondents (n ¼ 118), 18% reported that their friends were former romantic partners, 70% said they we ...
Appearance and Physiognomy - University of Toronto, Department
... images and compares results to recent studies using video stimuli and three-dimensional face image software. Finally, we will discuss some new directions in face research at the helm of taking physiognomy to places never previously considered (please see Chapter 10 for discussion of research on faci ...
... images and compares results to recent studies using video stimuli and three-dimensional face image software. Finally, we will discuss some new directions in face research at the helm of taking physiognomy to places never previously considered (please see Chapter 10 for discussion of research on faci ...
What Does Managing Emotions in Organizations Mean
... Because emotions are inner states, one can ask whether these private states are largely idiosyncratic. In other words, do various individuals feel very different emotions faced with the same event? Or, are there conditions under which many of an organization’s members can feel or display similar emo ...
... Because emotions are inner states, one can ask whether these private states are largely idiosyncratic. In other words, do various individuals feel very different emotions faced with the same event? Or, are there conditions under which many of an organization’s members can feel or display similar emo ...
The Progression of the Field of Kinesics
... labeled as impolite or perhaps viewed as angry, while in another region a response to a smile could be extreme friendliness or asked “what’s so funny?” (Birdwhistell 1970:31). Despite this, in a cross-cultural experiment conducted by psychologists Paul Ekman and Wallace Friesen, they discovered that ...
... labeled as impolite or perhaps viewed as angry, while in another region a response to a smile could be extreme friendliness or asked “what’s so funny?” (Birdwhistell 1970:31). Despite this, in a cross-cultural experiment conducted by psychologists Paul Ekman and Wallace Friesen, they discovered that ...
Emotion and persuasion: Cognitive and meta
... Wegener, 2007). In the second part of our review, we focus on meta-cognitive processes, describing recent work that reveals that emotions can influence attitudes by affecting how people think and feel about their own thoughts and thought processes. Finally, we distinguish among the processes by whic ...
... Wegener, 2007). In the second part of our review, we focus on meta-cognitive processes, describing recent work that reveals that emotions can influence attitudes by affecting how people think and feel about their own thoughts and thought processes. Finally, we distinguish among the processes by whic ...
Nonverbal skills and abilities (Chapter5).
... Skill in nonverbal decoding involves sensitivity to the nonverbal messages of others as well as the ability to interpret those messages accurately. For the most part, others’ nonverbal messages involve the communication of emotions, attitudes (e.g., liking or disliking), and cues of status or domina ...
... Skill in nonverbal decoding involves sensitivity to the nonverbal messages of others as well as the ability to interpret those messages accurately. For the most part, others’ nonverbal messages involve the communication of emotions, attitudes (e.g., liking or disliking), and cues of status or domina ...
Emotional communication - Thom Scott
... Duchenne smile3 in Owren and Bachorowski, 2001). The issue is that a proximal mechanism (the involuntariness of emotional displays) is offered to answer an ultimate question (about the honesty of emotional communication). We detail below the more specific issues with this answer. Moreover, neglectin ...
... Duchenne smile3 in Owren and Bachorowski, 2001). The issue is that a proximal mechanism (the involuntariness of emotional displays) is offered to answer an ultimate question (about the honesty of emotional communication). We detail below the more specific issues with this answer. Moreover, neglectin ...
Haptotherapy and Empathy
... and mirages. Nor are they always without meaning. On the contrary, they are usually more or less stable and they do have substantial meaning. In terms of the above theory, there must be some kind of potentiality in our emotional experiences for them to become real and to be given meaning. What could ...
... and mirages. Nor are they always without meaning. On the contrary, they are usually more or less stable and they do have substantial meaning. In terms of the above theory, there must be some kind of potentiality in our emotional experiences for them to become real and to be given meaning. What could ...
Emotions and Intercultural Communication t
... that dictate the appropriateness of emotion display depending on social circumstances. Learned from infancy, we are so adept at these rules that as adults, automatically and without much conscious awareness. ...
... that dictate the appropriateness of emotion display depending on social circumstances. Learned from infancy, we are so adept at these rules that as adults, automatically and without much conscious awareness. ...
Organizational Behavior 11e
... Emotions are critical factor in employee behavior. The “myth of rationality” Emotions of any kind are disruptive to organizations. – Original OB focus was solely on the effects of strong negative emotions that interfered with individual and organizational efficiency. ...
... Emotions are critical factor in employee behavior. The “myth of rationality” Emotions of any kind are disruptive to organizations. – Original OB focus was solely on the effects of strong negative emotions that interfered with individual and organizational efficiency. ...
The evolutionary psychology of the emotions and their relationship to
... program take as input? How is this information encoded, formatted, and represented as data structures? What operations are performed on these data structures to transform them into new representations or regulatory elements? And how do these procedures and data structures interact to generate and re ...
... program take as input? How is this information encoded, formatted, and represented as data structures? What operations are performed on these data structures to transform them into new representations or regulatory elements? And how do these procedures and data structures interact to generate and re ...
Emotion on Dover Beach: Feeling and Value in the
... should be bound by a conception of emotion designed to facilitate the empirical investigation of psychological and neural pro cesses. I have made similar points in work on social transactional accounts of emotion. Emotion is not a “natural kind” (Griffiths, 1997, 2004a). That is to say, the English ...
... should be bound by a conception of emotion designed to facilitate the empirical investigation of psychological and neural pro cesses. I have made similar points in work on social transactional accounts of emotion. Emotion is not a “natural kind” (Griffiths, 1997, 2004a). That is to say, the English ...
Specific nonverbal behavior and culture
... Darwin believes that emotion and their expressions had evolved across species, were evolutionarily adaptive, biologically innate, and universal across all human and even nonhuman primates (David, 2006). One knows that Darwin was one of the first investigators of body language in that time and his bo ...
... Darwin believes that emotion and their expressions had evolved across species, were evolutionarily adaptive, biologically innate, and universal across all human and even nonhuman primates (David, 2006). One knows that Darwin was one of the first investigators of body language in that time and his bo ...
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... again this coupling of concepts is clarifying in my view. Morton however does not end here but continues to say that shame too can be the reverse of selfrespect, if the shame is ‘unlinked from the attitudes of actual people’ (p.187). This shame would then be ‘an abstract, or timeless one’ (ibid). As ...
... again this coupling of concepts is clarifying in my view. Morton however does not end here but continues to say that shame too can be the reverse of selfrespect, if the shame is ‘unlinked from the attitudes of actual people’ (p.187). This shame would then be ‘an abstract, or timeless one’ (ibid). As ...
Physiological bases of behavior emotions
... culturally acquired. Certain facial expressions, such as smiling, have been found to be universal, even among blind persons, who have no means of imitating them. Other expressions vary across cultures. • In addition to the ways of communicating various emotions, people within a culture also learn ce ...
... culturally acquired. Certain facial expressions, such as smiling, have been found to be universal, even among blind persons, who have no means of imitating them. Other expressions vary across cultures. • In addition to the ways of communicating various emotions, people within a culture also learn ce ...
special file - METU Journal of the Faculty of Architecture
... emotional responses towards products on the level of subsistence, at which only basic necessities can be afforded? If so, how do these product emotions differ from those of higher income groups? Most answers to this question would yield important insights into the epistemological-ontological premise ...
... emotional responses towards products on the level of subsistence, at which only basic necessities can be afforded? If so, how do these product emotions differ from those of higher income groups? Most answers to this question would yield important insights into the epistemological-ontological premise ...
recognition of facial affect in borderline personality disorder
... neurofunctional abnormalities is also supported by Donegan and colleagues, who reported elevated amygdala activation to pictures of facial affect, even when the faces presented were of neutral valence (Donegan et al., 2003). The authors conclude that there might be a hypersensitivity to social cues, ...
... neurofunctional abnormalities is also supported by Donegan and colleagues, who reported elevated amygdala activation to pictures of facial affect, even when the faces presented were of neutral valence (Donegan et al., 2003). The authors conclude that there might be a hypersensitivity to social cues, ...
Emotion and Communication in Organizations
... stories allow emotion to be known through embedded lived experience. Ethnographers argue that to write emotionally, scholars must experiment with the format of their representations through creative writing and scholarly performances. Ellis (1991) has developed an “emotional sociology,” which aims t ...
... stories allow emotion to be known through embedded lived experience. Ethnographers argue that to write emotionally, scholars must experiment with the format of their representations through creative writing and scholarly performances. Ellis (1991) has developed an “emotional sociology,” which aims t ...
Slide - Martin Sewell
... • Romantic love is an emotion that keeps couples together, when a more immediate and apparently rational response might be to leave a partner as soon as a more attractive partner became available. • In the longer term, the ultimate goal of reproduction will be better served if love lasts long enough ...
... • Romantic love is an emotion that keeps couples together, when a more immediate and apparently rational response might be to leave a partner as soon as a more attractive partner became available. • In the longer term, the ultimate goal of reproduction will be better served if love lasts long enough ...
Myths - California State University, Fullerton
... Most people consider themselves good judges of emotion. – Confirmation bias ...
... Most people consider themselves good judges of emotion. – Confirmation bias ...
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... Nonverbal Communication: All communication that transcends the spoken or written word (Knapp) ...
... Nonverbal Communication: All communication that transcends the spoken or written word (Knapp) ...
Paul Ekman
Paul Ekman (born February 15, 1934) is an American psychologist who is a pioneer in the study of emotions and their relation to facial expressions. He has created an ""atlas of emotions"" with more than ten thousand facial expressions, and has gained a reputation as ""the best human lie detector in the world"".He was ranked 59th out of the 100 most cited psychologists of the twentieth century. Ekman conducted seminal research on the specific biological correlates of specific emotions, demonstrating the universality and discreteness of emotions in a Darwinian approach.