Increasing recognition of happiness in ambiguous facial expressions reduces anger and aggressive behavior.
about
The Status of Irritability in Psychiatry: A Conceptual and Quantitative ReviewLower Sensitivity to Happy and Angry Facial Emotions in Young Adults with Psychiatric Problems.In your face: the biased judgement of fear-anger expressions in violent offenders.Emotion recognition training using composite faces generalises across identities but not all emotionsFacial expression training optimises viewing strategy in children and adults.Emotion dysregulation in attention deficit hyperactivity disorderImproving Negative Emotion Recognition in Young Offenders Reduces Subsequent Crime.Tuning to the Positive: Age-Related Differences in Subjective Perception of Facial Emotion.Neural correlates of masked and unmasked face emotion processing in youth with severe mood dysregulationFeedback training induces a bias for detecting happiness or fear in facial expressions that generalises to a novel taskAn Open Pilot Study of Training Hostile Interpretation Bias to Treat Disruptive Mood Dysregulation Disorder.Effects of acute alcohol consumption and processing of emotion in faces: Implications for understanding alcohol-related aggression.Changing mothers' perception of infant emotion: a pilot study.An interactive training programme to treat body image disturbance.Pediatric Irritability: A Systems Neuroscience Approach.Addressing perceptual insensitivity to facial affect in violent offenders: first evidence for the efficacy of a novel implicit training approach.Adversity, emotion recognition, and empathic concern in high-risk youth.Stress-related changes in personality: A longitudinal study of perceived stress and trait pessimism.Investigation of the hostile attribution bias toward ambiguous facial cues in antisocial violent offenders.Emotional intelligence and criminal behavior.Perceiving the evil eye: Investigating hostile interpretation of ambiguous facial emotional expression in violent and non-violent offenders.Unique and Interactive Associations Between Maltreatment and Complex Emotion Recognition Deficits and Psychopathic Traits in an Undergraduate Sample.Associations Between Anxious and Depressive Symptoms and the Recognition of Vocal Socioemotional Expressions in Youth.Impaired social cognition in violent offenders: perceptual deficit or cognitive bias?Processes of Personality Development in Adulthood: The TESSERA Framework.Practitioner Review: Definition, recognition, and treatment challenges of irritability in young people.Generalized hostile interpretation bias regarding facial expressions: Characteristic of pathological aggressive behavior.Factors contributing to individual differences in facial expression categorisation.Attention and interpretation processes and trait anger experience, expression, and control.
P2860
Q26747136-53370CD5-6B3F-437E-B321-6CE38E4C262EQ30829312-DB28D384-181A-43DE-9B72-4AF18B027D26Q33677167-AB4CAD7D-0CD3-4586-B3CA-763D777309D4Q33738270-15BCBD4D-B9AF-4125-9D3D-250896AB3E03Q34075469-8AB4F0DA-60E6-43EF-B4C2-A50C4885074CQ34803697-B3ECEB21-A438-4E12-BE15-105E3D94B066Q35677078-B3376C32-2807-4683-AB6E-3EFB588E6C89Q35886566-24C1898A-4905-42EF-B6C7-AE02D05EF111Q36407551-52328CEF-7355-4800-AC87-21C64CA94353Q36409973-68F364B7-305D-4D5B-B543-442D50ECB0E6Q36654498-D0D7E93A-1CD2-4BAE-AC07-BCDD3FE29D85Q37130600-1C12A164-37EA-4C50-8AFB-884B59E5A200Q37221926-271BB5E2-E0CC-4D10-866F-C826491A917EQ37595920-77509612-FC3F-4917-A207-FD228C5A29B6Q39169117-4FC7C9C5-6F9F-4970-B041-40367BAA8CD1Q39394563-D422B4A2-22CD-47F2-A680-57084E1D36F0Q41105831-9693BF8B-ADE1-4539-A20E-093502305E5DQ41554906-33627C03-C46A-47B1-926F-2486EB9BF343Q43637066-090D5719-FA2A-4471-89B9-B68AD5850728Q46187446-99D72C7E-B20E-4812-8826-F371CBE3DAD6Q47151509-DFA4814D-F45B-4C5E-A4D0-0ADDF9938EA5Q47297005-121AB178-F466-4B6D-A222-B5F2E24EAC24Q47301970-6CBCEF22-03C4-48B1-9984-92972FCAC03FQ47393089-4782350F-A0D8-451E-9DC7-0007832CD9A6Q47423299-2E48FF58-4083-4718-977E-BE6E8293DD6FQ47586182-A3E58822-39F5-4A7D-98AC-8DE934CFB971Q48312071-88AD3A35-EC60-43BB-BDD6-19F8FC78798CQ50211872-C86E589C-AEB5-43A1-8261-B85586A7C927Q53219226-7B232DAA-BDFE-4392-9E90-1E03475BA5F1
P2860
Increasing recognition of happiness in ambiguous facial expressions reduces anger and aggressive behavior.
description
2013 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2013年の論文
@ja
2013年学术文章
@wuu
2013年学术文章
@zh-cn
2013年学术文章
@zh-hans
2013年学术文章
@zh-my
2013年学术文章
@zh-sg
2013年學術文章
@yue
2013年學術文章
@zh
2013年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Increasing recognition of happ ...... anger and aggressive behavior.
@en
Increasing recognition of happ ...... anger and aggressive behavior.
@nl
type
label
Increasing recognition of happ ...... anger and aggressive behavior.
@en
Increasing recognition of happ ...... anger and aggressive behavior.
@nl
prefLabel
Increasing recognition of happ ...... anger and aggressive behavior.
@en
Increasing recognition of happ ...... anger and aggressive behavior.
@nl
P2093
P2860
P50
P356
P1476
Increasing recognition of happ ...... anger and aggressive behavior
@en
P2093
Jamie Thomas
Mary McMurran
Sarah McDonald
P2860
P304
P356
10.1177/0956797612459657
P577
2013-03-26T00:00:00Z