Search results for "affect"

showing 10 items of 1382 documents

Fear of COVID-19 and Life Satisfaction: The Role of the Health-Related Hardiness and Sense of Coherence

2021

Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic is contributing to increased fear and anxiety throughout society, which may affect life satisfaction. Health-related hardiness and sense of coherence (SOC) are personal resources that help people adapt to difficult circumstances. The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between fear of COVID-19, SOC, health-related hardiness, and life satisfaction.Methods: A total of 907 Polish people (522 women and 385 men) participated in this study. The Fear of COVID-19 Scale (FOC-6), the Health-Related Hardiness Scale, the Sense of Coherence Scale (SOC-29), and the Satisfaction with Life Scale were used.Results: Correlation showed that fear of COV…

PsychiatryMediation (statistics)Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)fear of COVID-19RC435-571Life satisfactionsense of coherenceAffect (psychology)Psychiatry and Mental healthHardiness (psychological)hardinessScale (social sciences)medicineAnxietymediationmedicine.symptomPsychologylife satisfactionOriginal ResearchClinical psychologySense of coherenceFrontiers in Psychiatry
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Spanish Validation of the Multidimensional Existential Meaning Scale: Which Dimension of Meaning in Life Is More Associated With Psychopathology in P…

2022

BackgroundTo assess three dimensions of Meaning in Life (comprehension, purpose, and mattering) the Multidimensional Existential Meaning Scale (MEMS) was developed, however, the MEMS's factorial structure has not yet been confirmed in a Spanish-speaking sample. A question that remains unanswered is which of the three dimensions of MiL are associated with psychopathology in clinical samples.Aims(1) to analyze the psychometric properties of the MEMS in a Spanish non-clinical population, and (2) to identify which of the three dimensions of MiL shows the strongest relationship with depression, anxiety and positive affect in a clinical population.MethodThe non-clinical sample, consisted of N = 1…

PsychiatryPsychiatry and Mental healthmeaning in lifeembryonic structuresRC435-571matteringpurposepositive affectcoherenceFrontiers in psychiatry
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The role of mental imagery in depression : negative mental imagery induces strong implicit and explicit affect in depression

2015

Mental imagery, seeing with the mind's eyes, can induce stronger positive as well as negative affect compared to verbal processing. Given this emotion-amplifying effect, it appears likely that mental images play an important role in affective disorders. According to the subcomponents model of depression, depressed mood is maintained by both negative imagery (which amplifies negative mood) and less efficient positive imagery processes. Empirical research on the link between mental imagery and affect in clinical depression, however, is still sparse. This study aimed at testing the role of mental imagery in depression, using a modified version of the affect misattribution procedure (AMP) and t…

Psychiatrymental imageryaffect misattribution procedurelcsh:RC435-571implicit measurelcsh:Psychiatry150 Psychologiedepressionaffect misattribution procedure (AMP)150 Psychologyimplicit affectOriginal Research
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Psychosis, symbol, affectivity 1: etiopathogenesis and treatment through analytical psychology

2021

This is the first of two papers concerning our study into an integrated approach to psychotic disorders, conducted at the University of Palermo's Psychiatry Unit Polyclinic over approximately 15 years. Here we will explore and reflect upon the acute psychotic condition mainly from a theoretical and conceptual perspective, while in the second paper we will explore the clinical perspective. From the point of view of psychopathology, and in the light of C.G. Jung's conceptualization of analytical psychology, as well as calling on contributions from other authors from the systemic-relational and post-psychoanalytic field, we will clarify the ideas developed over these last few years by our team…

PsychoanalysisJungian Theorymedia_common.quotation_subjecttreatment of psychosesPsychoanalysisPsychicJ.W. PerrySettore M-PSI/08 - Psicologia Clinicapsychotic symbolismHumansSettore MED/25 - Psichiatriamedia_commonConceptualizationPerspective (graphical)Analytical psychologyPsychodynamicsPsychotherapyClinical PsychologySymbolPolyclinicaffectivity in psychosisPsychotic Disordersanalytical psychologyPsychologyaffective neurosciencePsychopathology
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Comments on “Failure, Identity Loss and Living Information Systems” by P. Kanellis, M. Lycett, and R.J. Paul

2000

Information system (IS) failure is a pervasive phenomenon. Like the paper’s introduction, common sense and statistics show information system failure is common and also important, because huge amounts of human effort and economic resources are spent without much gain. The issue of failure is also related to FRISCO report and the theme of the conference in two ways. First our concepts and ideas about information system and the nature of information system development can affect either positively or negatively our intellectual and technical capabilities to influence the likelihood of IS failure. Second, because information system definition forms one key concept and focus of the FRISCO report…

Psychoanalysisbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectInternet privacyIdentity (social science)Common senseAffect (psychology)Focus (linguistics)PhenomenonKey (cryptography)Information systemSociologybusinessTheme (narrative)media_common
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Strange bedfellows

2007

Feminist debates on pornography have relied on articulations of affect, from anti-pornography rhetoric of grief, anger and disgust to anti-anti-pornography claims to enjoyment and pleasure. The complexity of reading, the interpenetration of affect and analysis, experience and interpretation tend to become effaced in arguments both for and against pornography. This article argues for the necessity of moving beyond the affective range of disgust versus pleasure in feminist studies of pornography. Drawing on theorizations of reading and affect, particularly Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick’s discussion of ‘paranoid’ and ‘reparative’ reading, it investigates the possibilities of analysing commercial emai…

Psychoanalysismedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciences050801 communication & media studiesAngerAffect (psychology)DisgustDevelopmental psychologyPleasureGender Studies0508 media and communications050903 gender studiesReading (process)RhetoricPornographyGrief0509 other social sciencesPsychologymedia_commonFeminist Theory
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The Development of Motor and Pre-literacy Skills by a Physical Education Program in Preschool Children: A Non-randomized Pilot Trial

2019

It is known in the literature that fundamental motor skill acquisition is strongly associated with the development of neuromotor, cognitive, social, and emotional aspects in childhood. Unfortunately, in Italy, the physical education teacher is not included in the school’s core personnel, and it is very hard to find a specific physical education program (PEP) that could improve preschool children’s motor and cognitive status. The aim of this study was to investigate whether the quotient of gross motor development (QGMD) and pre-literacy skills concerning visual analysis and spatial orientation abilities changed after 16 weeks of PEP (2 h/week) in preschool children. We conducted a school-bas…

Psychology (all)media_common.quotation_subjectlcsh:BF1-990educationGross motor skillPsychological interventionphysical activityAffect (psychology)050105 experimental psychologyLiteracyPhysical educationPre-literacy skill03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePsychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesFundamental motor skillGeneral PsychologyMotor skillOriginal Researchchildhoodmedia_commoneducationexercise05 social sciencesCognitionfundamental motor skillspre-literacy skillslcsh:PsychologyHealthPsychologyBody mass index030217 neurology & neurosurgeryClinical psychologyFrontiers in Psychology
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The independence of positive and negative affect depends on the affect measure

1998

Abstract This study examined the degree of independence between Positive Affect (PA) and Negative Affect (NA) within a given situation. The affective state was measured before and after an experimentally induced success or failure experience in an anagram task. Two types of affect measures were used to assess PA and NA: the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS) and a Pleasantness-Unpleasantness scale. Consistent with our hypotheses, results show that PA and NA are independent when measured with the PANAS but are correlated when assessed with the other scale. These PA-NA correlations differed significantly from each other before and after emotion induction, respectively. Additional a…

PsychometricsPositive and Negative Affect ScheduleMood inductionTest validityPsychologyAffect (psychology)General PsychologyAffect measuresIndependence (probability theory)Developmental psychologyEmotion inductionPersonality and Individual Differences
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Reliability and validity of the Toronto Structured Interview for Alexithymia in a mixed clinical and nonclinical sample from Italy

2011

The reliability and validity of the Toronto Structured Interview for Alexithymia (TSIA) have been demonstrated in previous studies with English-speaking community and psychiatric samples and a German-speaking psychiatric sample. The aim of this study was to evaluate the psychometric properties of the TSIA in a mixed clinical and nonclinical sample from Italy. The original English version of the TSIA was translated into Italian and administered, along with the 20-item Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS-20), to 80 healthy subjects, 69 medical outpatients, and 62 psychiatric outpatients. Eighty-one videotaped interviews were used for assessing the interrater reliability. Confirmatory factor analys…

PsychometricsStatistics as TopicConcurrent validityTest validityDevelopmental psychologyInterviews as TopicToronto Alexithymia ScaleTSIA alexithymia validationAlexithymiamedicineHumansTSIAAffective SymptomsBiological PsychiatryPsychiatric Status Rating Scalesvalidationmedicine.diagnostic_testReproducibility of ResultsVideotape RecordingConstruct validityTranslatingmedicine.diseaseConfirmatory factor analysisPsychiatry and Mental healthItalyConvergent validityStructured interviewalexithymiaFactor Analysis StatisticalPsychologyClinical psychology
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Functional food science and behaviour and psychological functions

2017

INSERM-Unite 341 et Service de Nutrition, Hotel-Dieu, Paris, France. bellisle@imaginet.frThe impact of ingesting various foods on psychological and behavioural functions is a topic of both interest and concern to the general public. In this article, the scientific literature concerning demonstrated cause-and-effect relationships is reviewed, beginning with methodological considerations specific to the quantification of particular behaviours and psychological events. The essential function of food is to satisfy hunger and the need for essential nutrients. The contributions of macronutrients to appetite and satiety are described, as well as their impact on metabolism and energy balance. Funct…

Psychomotor learningBehaviorNutrition and Dieteticsfood.ingredientFood additivedigestive oral and skin physiologyMedicine (miscellaneous)CognitionHyperkinesisDysphoriaMental healthDietAffectCognitionfoodFunctional foodFoodmedicineHumansNutritional Physiological PhenomenaNutritional Physiological Phenomenamedicine.symptomSet (psychology)PsychologyCognitive psychology
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