Search results for "emotions"

showing 10 items of 747 documents

Prenatal Ultrasound Screening: False Positive Soft Markers May Alter Maternal Representations and Mother-Infant Interaction

2012

Background In up to 5% of pregnancies, ultrasound screening detects a “soft marker” (SM) that places the foetus at risk for a severe abnormality. In most cases, prenatal diagnostic work-up rules out a severe defect. We aimed to study the effects of false positive SM on maternal emotional status, maternal representations of the infant, and mother-infant interaction. Methodology and Principal Findings Utilizing an extreme-case prospective case control design, we selected from a group of 244 women undergoing ultrasound, 19 pregnant women whose foetus had a positive SM screening and a reassuring diagnostic work up, and 19 controls without SM matched for age and education. In the third trimester…

Multivariate analysisEmotionslcsh:Medicine[SHS.PSY]Humanities and Social Sciences/PsychologyUltrasound screening0302 clinical medicinePregnancyPsychologyLongitudinal Studieslcsh:ScienceMaternal BehaviorDepression (differential diagnoses)Psychiatry030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicineMultidisciplinaryObstetrics05 social sciencesObstetrics and GynecologyMother-Child Relations3. Good healthFetal DiseasesMaternal sensitivityMental HealthAnxietyMedicineFemalemedicine.symptomAbnormalityAlgorithms050104 developmental & child psychologyResearch ArticleAdultmedicine.medical_specialtyfalse positiveMothers[SDV.MHEP.GEO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Gynecology and obstetricsAffect (psychology)Ultrasonography Prenatal03 medical and health sciencesmedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesFalse Positive ReactionsPsychiatryPregnancybusiness.industrylcsh:RCase-control studyInfant Newbornmother-infant attachment qualitymedicine.diseasesoft markerCase-Control Studieslcsh:QbusinessBiomarkersPLoS ONE
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Key processing precedes emotional categorization of Western music.

2005

To investigate whether key processing precedes the appraisal of valence in music, participants listened to pairs of clips of same or different valence, played either in the same key or one semitone apart. They judged whether the second clip expressed the same emotion as the first one. Our predictions were confirmed: the response times obtained were shorter when both clips were played in the same key than when they were played one semitone apart.

Music psychologyGeneral NeuroscienceEmotionsSemitoneGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyHistory and Philosophy of ScienceCategorizationAcoustic StimulationMusic and emotionAuditory PerceptionHumansWestern musicValence (psychology)PsychologyArousalPitch PerceptionSocial psychologyMusicCognitive psychologyPsychoacousticsAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences
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Subjective appraisal of music: neuroimaging evidence.

2009

In the neurosciences of music, a consensus on the nature of affective states during music listening has not been reached. What is undeniable is that subjective affective states can be triggered by various and even opposite musical events. Here we review the few recent studies on the neural determinants of subjective affective processes of music, contrasted with early automatic neural processes linked to the objective universal properties of music. In particular, we focus on the evaluative judgments of music by subjects according to its aesthetic and structural values, on music-specific emotions felt by listeners, and on conscious liking. We then discuss and seek to stimulate further researc…

Music psychologyGeneral NeuroscienceEmotionsSocial environmentCognitionMusicalMagnetic Resonance ImagingGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyFocus (linguistics)History and Philosophy of ScienceMusic and emotionHumansActive listeningBig Five personality traitsPsychologyMusicCognitive psychologyAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences
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Modelling of Social Policy and Initiatives under COVID-19: Rural NEET Youth Case Study

2021

NEET (Not in Education, Employment, or Training) youth rates in Europe are generally higher in rural regions than in urban areas and the share in rural regions is constantly increasing. During the COVID-19 pandemic, young people became even more vulnerable as they experienced social exclusion and mental health problems. The objective of this paper is to analyse NEET youth-related statistics in Europe and distinguish positive initiatives for young people in rural areas of the Baltic countries to encourage positive emotions and willingness to learn. Statistical analysis and case study methods were employed. Data on youth unemployment, NEET youth by age and gender, and poverty and social exclu…

NEET youthEconomic growthunemploymentSocial emotionsYouth unemploymentPovertymedia_common.quotation_subjectGeneral Social SciencesCOVID-19 pandemicSocial SciencesemotionsMental healthHPolitical scienceUnemploymentSocial exclusionRural areamental healthSocial policymedia_commonSocial Sciences
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Emotions and epistemology: a path for reconsideration in the 21st century

2017

The present paper explores the gap between sensations and emotions in the global capitalism. We held the thesis that there are diverse ways to systematise the theoretical orientations on which the studies on the body/emotion are based; a possible one, having in mind the Latin American context and without intent of exhaustiveness, is the following: a) a line of work connected to Foucault and his concepts of control, discipline, and technologies of the self; b) an approach connected to Bourdieu and his notions of habitus, body hexis, and social fields; c) a set of investigations in the field of biopolitics referring to Esposito and Agamben on the one hand, and to Negri and Hardt on the other;…

NanotecnologíaCAPITALISMField (Bourdieu)SelfContext (language use)INGENIERÍAS Y TECNOLOGÍASCapitalismNano-materialesGLOBALISATIONEpistemologyHexisGlobalizationEMOTIONSSENSATIONSHabitusGeneral Materials ScienceSociologyMIGRATIONSBiopower
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Neurodidáctica y la implicación de emociones en el aprendizaje

2012

The purpose of this article is to highlight the importance of a new discipli- ne named neurodidactics; also aims to emphasize the role that emotions play in learning. The interaction between teacher and student that is based on the cir- cular model of motivation, cognition, memory and emotions, can be organized and implemented through neurodidactics, whose main objective is to create tea- ching methodologies for an ecology of mind. This discipline is at the crossroads between neurobiology and science education since it is based on the principle that any learning process itself involves a change in the brain, in that our neural networks are affected by changes. At the same time the paper set…

Neurodidactics Emotions Memory Stress Motivation.Settore L-LIN/07 - Lingua E Traduzione - Lingua Spagnola
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Neuronal populations mediating the effects of endocannabinoids on stress and emotionality

2011

An adequate emotional response to stress is essential for survival and requires the fine-tuned regulation of several distinct neuronal circuits. Therefore, a precise control of these circuits is necessary to prevent behavioral imbalances. During the last decade, numerous investigations have evidenced that the endocannabinoid (eCB) system is able to crucially control stress coping. Its central component, the cannabinoid type 1 receptor (CB1 receptor), is located at the presynapse, where it is able to attenuate neurotransmitter release after its activation by postsynaptically produced and released eCBs. To date, the eCB system has been found to control the neurotransmitter release from severa…

NeuronsHypothalamo-Hypophyseal SystemGeneral NeuroscienceEmotionsGlutamate receptorPituitary-Adrenal SystemContext (language use)Endocannabinoid systemAmygdalaPresynapsemedicine.anatomical_structureReceptor Cannabinoid CB1nervous systemStress PhysiologicalCannabinoid Receptor ModulatorsSynapsesmedicineAnimalsLocus coeruleusPremovement neuronal activityPsychologyPrefrontal cortexNeuroscienceStress PsychologicalEndocannabinoidsNeuroscience
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Neuroticism may reflect emotional variability when correcting for the confound with the mean

2020

Kalokerinos et al. (1) demonstrate that emotional variability, as assessed via the SD, is not significantly associated with neuroticism once the confound with mean negative emotion is controlled for, r = 0.05. To control for this confound, the authors use the relative SD (RSD), which mathematically corrects for the nonlinear dependency between the SD and the mean (2). The authors prefer the RSD over including the SD and the mean of negative emotions in a model, given the nonlinearity of their association. While we agree that the RSD is an important addition to the field, we argue that including the mean of emotions is still necessary when examining the association between neuroticism and em…

NeuroticismMultidisciplinary05 social sciencesEmotionsIndividuality050401 social sciences methods050109 social psychologyNeuroticism0504 sociology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesLettersPsychologyAssociation (psychology)Negative emotionClinical psychology
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Combining Inter-Subject Modeling with a Subject-Based Data Transformation to Improve Affect Recognition from EEG Signals

2019

Existing correlations between features extracted from Electroencephalography (EEG) signals and emotional aspects have motivated the development of a diversity of EEG-based affect detection methods. Both intra-subject and inter-subject approaches have been used in this context. Intra-subject approaches generally suffer from the small sample problem, and require the collection of exhaustive data for each new user before the detection system is usable. On the contrary, inter-subject models do not account for the personality and physiological influence of how the individual is feeling and expressing emotions. In this paper, we analyze both modeling approaches, using three public repositories. T…

Normalization (statistics)Data AnalysisSupport Vector MachineDatabases FactualComputer sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectEmotionsData transformation (statistics)Context (language use)02 engineering and technologyvalence detectionElectroencephalographyAffect (psychology)Machine learningcomputer.software_genrelcsh:Chemical technologyBiochemistryModels BiologicalArticleAnalytical Chemistrydata transformation0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringmedicinePersonalityHumanslcsh:TP1-1185EEGElectrical and Electronic EngineeringInstrumentationarousal detectionmedia_commonmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industry020206 networking & telecommunicationsSubject (documents)ElectroencephalographySignal Processing Computer-AssistedAtomic and Molecular Physics and Opticsnormalization020201 artificial intelligence & image processingArtificial intelligencebusinessArousalcomputerSensors
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Is context a crucial factor in distinguishing between intrusions and obsessions in patients with obsessive‐compulsive disorder?

2021

Objective Some cognitive models of obsessive‐compulsive disorder (OCD) posit that intrusions exist on a continuum with obsessions; others consider that they may be unrelated phenomena that differ in the context where they occur. We aimed to examine and compare, at two different moments, the context of the occurrence of intrusions and obsessions. Method Sixty‐eight patients with OCD completed an interview appraising their most upsetting obsession and intrusion. Results At their onset, the obsessions/intrusions were associated with experiencing negative emotional states and life events, and they were more likely to appear in 'inappropriate' contexts. The context of the obsessions/intrusions d…

Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder050103 clinical psychologyPersonality InventoryEmotions05 social sciencesLife eventsContext (language use)Cognition030227 psychiatryDevelopmental psychology03 medical and health sciencesClinical PsychologyIntrusion0302 clinical medicineArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Obsessive compulsiveHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesIn patientObsessive BehaviorPsychologyJournal of Clinical Psychology
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