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 ...
recognition of facial affect in borderline personality disorder
... Emotion Recognition Task. To minimize the effect of guessing, all trials that were not stopped by a button press before an intensity of 100% had been reached were excluded from further analyses. Through this, less than 5 percent of all trials, mean +/− s.e.; borderline patients: 4.9 +/− 1.3; healthy ...
... Emotion Recognition Task. To minimize the effect of guessing, all trials that were not stopped by a button press before an intensity of 100% had been reached were excluded from further analyses. Through this, less than 5 percent of all trials, mean +/− s.e.; borderline patients: 4.9 +/− 1.3; healthy ...
Comparative Study on Sharing Economy in EU and ECORL
... Writing a document on the “social economy” and “sharing economy” is a challenging task, as entire reports and books have been devoted to the subject. More importantly, in the scientific literature and in the public discourse, we find a broad range of definitions and understandings of the nature of t ...
... Writing a document on the “social economy” and “sharing economy” is a challenging task, as entire reports and books have been devoted to the subject. More importantly, in the scientific literature and in the public discourse, we find a broad range of definitions and understandings of the nature of t ...
The RICOR Model of Social Influence
... After witnessing an event, if people are exposed to misleading information (e.g., in questioning about the event details), they may mistakenly import that information into their report of their memory of the event itself (Loftus, 2005). The source of the misleading information is not correctly recal ...
... After witnessing an event, if people are exposed to misleading information (e.g., in questioning about the event details), they may mistakenly import that information into their report of their memory of the event itself (Loftus, 2005). The source of the misleading information is not correctly recal ...
- Sydney Symposium of Social Psychology
... incorporation of an in-group as part of the self (Smith & Henry, 1996) – provides the means by which an in-group can acquire affective and emotional significance (Cialdini et al., 1976). When groups and group memberships become part of the self in this way, events may be appraised in terms of their ...
... incorporation of an in-group as part of the self (Smith & Henry, 1996) – provides the means by which an in-group can acquire affective and emotional significance (Cialdini et al., 1976). When groups and group memberships become part of the self in this way, events may be appraised in terms of their ...
Emotional Engineers: Toward Morally Responsible Design
... engineers, and how this could be achieved. In the next section I will discuss how we can implement emotional reflection in the engineering design process. Including Emotions in the Design Process As I argued in the previous sections, we need engineers who take their emotional responses seriously, as ...
... engineers, and how this could be achieved. In the next section I will discuss how we can implement emotional reflection in the engineering design process. Including Emotions in the Design Process As I argued in the previous sections, we need engineers who take their emotional responses seriously, as ...
In Terror`s Grip: Healing the Ravages of Trauma
... Confronted with an experience that includes elements of their original trauma, people with PTSD may react as if they were going through it again. Specifically, when enough of their sensations (such as being touched in a particular way, being exposed to certain smells, or seeing images that remind th ...
... Confronted with an experience that includes elements of their original trauma, people with PTSD may react as if they were going through it again. Specifically, when enough of their sensations (such as being touched in a particular way, being exposed to certain smells, or seeing images that remind th ...
Sense of community: A definition and theory
... correlated than are variables measured across domains (e.g., feelings and behaviors) (Campbell & Fiske, 1959). Despite the weakness of the study as suggested by such an explanation, we believe that the findings of Riger et al. attest to the force of sense of community in the lives of neighborhood re ...
... correlated than are variables measured across domains (e.g., feelings and behaviors) (Campbell & Fiske, 1959). Despite the weakness of the study as suggested by such an explanation, we believe that the findings of Riger et al. attest to the force of sense of community in the lives of neighborhood re ...
Friendship and Happiness from a Sociological Perspective
... emotions ranging from feeling pleasant to experiencing great joy. Meanwhile Daniel Haybron (2007) provides a definition of happiness, well-being and life satisfaction in regard to the use of empirical studies of happiness. According to Haybron, in much of the survey-based research on happiness, the ...
... emotions ranging from feeling pleasant to experiencing great joy. Meanwhile Daniel Haybron (2007) provides a definition of happiness, well-being and life satisfaction in regard to the use of empirical studies of happiness. According to Haybron, in much of the survey-based research on happiness, the ...
The Emotional‐Cognitive Processing Model
... Festinger’s (1957) cognitive dissonance theory (CDT) asserts people engage in dissonance reduction by seeking consistency between one’s beliefs and actions. The four methods people use to relieve internal tension are selective attention, retention, perception and exposure. CDT asserts that people ha ...
... Festinger’s (1957) cognitive dissonance theory (CDT) asserts people engage in dissonance reduction by seeking consistency between one’s beliefs and actions. The four methods people use to relieve internal tension are selective attention, retention, perception and exposure. CDT asserts that people ha ...
Involuntary Leakage in Deceptive Facial Expressions as a Function
... Darwin (1872), of course, was interested in emotional expressions (Hess and Thibault 2009) and observed that, ‘‘A man when moderately angry, or even when enraged, may command the movements of his body, but…those muscles of the face which are least obedient to the will, will sometimes alone betray a ...
... Darwin (1872), of course, was interested in emotional expressions (Hess and Thibault 2009) and observed that, ‘‘A man when moderately angry, or even when enraged, may command the movements of his body, but…those muscles of the face which are least obedient to the will, will sometimes alone betray a ...
International Journal of Education and Research Vol. 3 No. 5 May
... verbal and mathematical aspects. However, when tested with an average grade students, there is a significant relationship between emotional intelligence and scores average grade students. Two dimensions of emotional intelligence empathy and self-control showed a significant relationship to the achie ...
... verbal and mathematical aspects. However, when tested with an average grade students, there is a significant relationship between emotional intelligence and scores average grade students. Two dimensions of emotional intelligence empathy and self-control showed a significant relationship to the achie ...
`Encounters with Strangers`: Psycho
... can undermine the self-esteem of people with impairments. I have also indicated the different ways that these two disabled men responded to this dimension of disability, and it is these ‘technologies of resistance’ (Reeve, 2002), or what Keith refers to as ‘techniques of resistance’ (Keith, 1996: 86 ...
... can undermine the self-esteem of people with impairments. I have also indicated the different ways that these two disabled men responded to this dimension of disability, and it is these ‘technologies of resistance’ (Reeve, 2002), or what Keith refers to as ‘techniques of resistance’ (Keith, 1996: 86 ...
Burleson, 2003 - Gender differences in emotional support
... is such an understanding universally warranted? Might this preoccupation with affect describe only one orientation to closeness in relationships—one most characteristic of Western, white, middle-class females? The last of these questions expresses a thesis articulated with growing frequency in both ...
... is such an understanding universally warranted? Might this preoccupation with affect describe only one orientation to closeness in relationships—one most characteristic of Western, white, middle-class females? The last of these questions expresses a thesis articulated with growing frequency in both ...
... main concept in social cognitive theory is that an individual’s actions and reactions, including social behaviours and cognitive processes, in almost every situation are influenced by the actions that individual has observed in others. Because self-efficacy is developed from external experiences and ...
THE RETURN OF THE REPRESSED
... emotions come directly from crowds (or demagogues), having little to do with individuals’ own lives and goals. They appear and disappear in response to what is happening in one’s immediate surroundings, with little lasting resonance. In the Freudian tradition, emotions result from individual persona ...
... emotions come directly from crowds (or demagogues), having little to do with individuals’ own lives and goals. They appear and disappear in response to what is happening in one’s immediate surroundings, with little lasting resonance. In the Freudian tradition, emotions result from individual persona ...
The Social Calibration of Emotion Expression - polsoz.fu
... of social interaction that are not usually the object of reflexive processes but that, I claim, are indispensable to the smooth unfolding of everyday interaction. Specifically, I aim at investigating the role of emotion and the role of automatic and involuntary facial expressions of emotion in the s ...
... of social interaction that are not usually the object of reflexive processes but that, I claim, are indispensable to the smooth unfolding of everyday interaction. Specifically, I aim at investigating the role of emotion and the role of automatic and involuntary facial expressions of emotion in the s ...
Organizational Behavior 11e
... Implications of the theory ACT – Individual response reflects emotions and mood cycles. – Current and past emotions affect job satisfaction. – Emotional fluctuations create variations in job satisfaction and performance. – Both negative and positive emotions can distract workers and reduce job per ...
... Implications of the theory ACT – Individual response reflects emotions and mood cycles. – Current and past emotions affect job satisfaction. – Emotional fluctuations create variations in job satisfaction and performance. – Both negative and positive emotions can distract workers and reduce job per ...
Chapter 14
... By the end of the first year, infants can also regulate their emotions by rocking themselves, moving away from upsetting events, or actively seeking attachment figures who will calm them By 18 to 24 months, toddlers will try to control the actions of people and objects (for example, by pushing the o ...
... By the end of the first year, infants can also regulate their emotions by rocking themselves, moving away from upsetting events, or actively seeking attachment figures who will calm them By 18 to 24 months, toddlers will try to control the actions of people and objects (for example, by pushing the o ...
Н - Sociostudies.org
... adaptive. He says that those ‘tribes’ who develop an avoidance of internal competition stand the best chance of Darwinian survival. He imputes a ‘tribal’ origin to human society and rejects what he regards as a seventeenth and eighteenth-century notion that the family was the basis of early human ex ...
... adaptive. He says that those ‘tribes’ who develop an avoidance of internal competition stand the best chance of Darwinian survival. He imputes a ‘tribal’ origin to human society and rejects what he regards as a seventeenth and eighteenth-century notion that the family was the basis of early human ex ...
To Share or Not to Share: When Do Toddlers Respond to Another's
... by I2 to 18 months of age (Hay, 1979; Rheingold, Hay, & West, 1976). By 2 years of age children also show and offer toys to one another in naturally occurring play, but sharing is infrequent unless requested by an adult (Hay, Castle, Davies, Demetriou, & Stimson, 1999; Levitt, Weber, Clark, & McDonn ...
... by I2 to 18 months of age (Hay, 1979; Rheingold, Hay, & West, 1976). By 2 years of age children also show and offer toys to one another in naturally occurring play, but sharing is infrequent unless requested by an adult (Hay, Castle, Davies, Demetriou, & Stimson, 1999; Levitt, Weber, Clark, & McDonn ...
Emotional Intelligence and the Tendency to Use
... impaired limits category is negatively correlated with the development of social skills and self-consciousness was not confirmed, as the total scores on the three factors were not significantly correlated (the Pearson Chi-square coefficients were 0.706 and 0.278). It should be mentioned though that ...
... impaired limits category is negatively correlated with the development of social skills and self-consciousness was not confirmed, as the total scores on the three factors were not significantly correlated (the Pearson Chi-square coefficients were 0.706 and 0.278). It should be mentioned though that ...
Emotion on Dover Beach: Feeling and Value in the
... strategy for seeking a better deal in a relationship—an emotional game of “chicken” in which someone threatens a mutually beneficial relationship in order to obtain concessions from the other person. The question confronting an agent deciding whether to become upset in this way is not whether they h ...
... strategy for seeking a better deal in a relationship—an emotional game of “chicken” in which someone threatens a mutually beneficial relationship in order to obtain concessions from the other person. The question confronting an agent deciding whether to become upset in this way is not whether they h ...
764430_1_9-chapters-ob
... 1. An emotional episode is actually the result of a series of emotional experiences triggered by a single event ...
... 1. An emotional episode is actually the result of a series of emotional experiences triggered by a single event ...
PDF
... that some emotions are à priori morally more advanced or desirable than others, or that emotional maturity necessarily entails more tempered and controlled emotional displays. All such classifications and beliefs emerge from specific contexts situated in a specific time and place. Moreover, to the e ...
... that some emotions are à priori morally more advanced or desirable than others, or that emotional maturity necessarily entails more tempered and controlled emotional displays. All such classifications and beliefs emerge from specific contexts situated in a specific time and place. Moreover, to the e ...
Social sharing of emotions
The social sharing of emotions is a phenomenon in the field of psychology that concerns the tendency to recount and share emotional experiences with others. According to this area of research, emotional experiences are not uniquely fleeting and internal. Scientific studies of catastrophes and important life events demonstrate the propensity of victims to talk about their experiences and express their emotions. At the onset of these empirical studies, Rimé et al. coined the term “social sharing of emotions” in 1991 to name the observed phenomenon. This research was a significant development in social psychology because it questioned the accepted view of emotions—that emotions are short-lived and intrapersonal episodes—that was prevalent in the literature. Yet, the first set of experiments revealed that 88–96% of emotional experiences are shared and discussed to some degree. Therefore, the studies concerning the social sharing of emotions contribute a substantial new perspective to the understanding of emotions and their underlying processes.