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Negative affect structure of Chinese adolescents in Hong KongKwok, Wai Yee Alice. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2007. / Includes bibliographical references.
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The effects of positive emotions on executive functions: how these two constructs interrelate with behavioral social outcomes in Chinese adolescents.January 2014 (has links)
執行功能指代一系列高水平的認知加工過程。情緒狀態被證明對執行功能具有重要影響。然而,以往研究大多關注消極情緒的影響效應。本研究則借助實驗操作(研究1)和行為問卷(研究2),以國內青少年為被試,考察並比較了不同動機強度的積極情緒如何作用執行功能。此外,執行功能、積極情緒作為獨立的兩個變量,均被證明能夠有效預測青少年的問題行為與社交技能,但是以往鮮有研究探討它們對於這些結果變量的共同預測效力,據此,研究2還對這一問題作了分析。 / 研究1包括兩個實驗,分別考察有/無動機傾向(實驗1)與高/低動機強度的積極情緒(實驗2)對執行功能的影響效應。兩個實驗均為隨機對照設計,並用數字字母任務、Go/No-go任務、Flanker任務、線索回憶任務、N-back任務來測量基本的執行功能,包括定勢轉換、抑制能力、工作記憶刷新。實驗1隨機向每個被試呈現具有不同情感色彩的視頻短片,以此誘發:中性狀態、有動機傾向的積極情緒(興趣)、無動機傾向的積極情緒(逗樂、寧靜)以及動機強度不同的兩種消極情緒(緊張、厭惡)。實驗2則誘發中性狀態以及高/低動機強度的興趣。兩個實驗均測量了情緒誘發前後被試的生理喚醒作為控制變量。研究2用問卷評估了執行功能、不同動機強度的積極情緒、外向/內向的問題行為、五種基本的社交技能,並用回歸模型分析變量間的關係。 / 研究1結果顯示在控制了生理喚醒的效應后:(1)興趣仍顯著損害了所有執行任務表現,興趣動機強度越高,損害越傾向於嚴重;(2)相比中性狀態,逗樂與寧靜均未對執行任務表現造成顯著影響;(3)厭惡較之緊張,前者傾向於更嚴重地損害執行任務表現。研究2的重要結果有,在控制了性別、年齡與大五人格特質的效應后:(1)不論動機強度如何,積極情緒越多就傾向於導致執行功能越差;(2)執行功能在積極情緒與結果變量之間發揮中介作用。可見,動機強度調節著情緒對執行功能的影響效應。研究結果的理論及實踐啓發將在論文中作討論。 / Executive functions (EFs),an umbrella term encompassing various high-level cognitive processes, play an important role in child and adolescent development. Extensive evidence indicates that emotions exert great impact on EFs. However, previous studies mostly concerned the effects of negative emotions on EFs. The primary purpose of this study was to add to the literature by examininghow EFs were influenced by positive emotions that varied in motivational intensity among Chinese adolescents, using an experiment (Study 1) and through behavioral means (Study 2). Given that EFs and positive emotions have been separately proven as strong predictors to problem behaviors and social skills, Study 2 also explored their joint effect in predicting these outcome variables. / Study 1 comprised two experiments, which respectively compared the effects of motivating versus non-motivating positive emotions (Experiment 1 ) and of high-versus low-motivating positive emotions (Experiment 2). Both experiments employed the randomized controlled design and utilized the Number-Letter task, the Go/No-go task, the Flanker task, the Cued Recall task, and the N-back task to assess the fundamental EFs, i.e., set shifting, inhibition-related functioning, and working memory updating. Experiment 1 used film clips to induce hilarity, serenity, interest, anxiety, disgust, and neutral state. Whereas hilarity and serenity are non-motivating positive emotions, interest is the typical motivating positive emotion. Disgust has higher motivational intensity than anxiety. In Experiment 2, three emotional states were induced: low-motivating interest, high-motivating interest, and neutral state. Participants’ physiological arousal (i.e., blood pressure and pulse rate) were measured both before and after the emotion induction in two experiments, in order to control the potential influence of physiological arousal on executive performance. / In Study 2, behavioral measures were used to assess motivating/non-motivating positive emotions, EFs, externalizing/internalizing behaviors, and five basic social skills (i.e., social adaptability, social perception, social confidence, social expressiveness, and impression management). Regression analyses were conducted to explore the interrelationship between these constructs. / Results of Study 1 revealed that after controlling for physiological arousal: (1) interest impaired performance in all five executive tasks, with higher motivational intensity tending to aggravate the impairment; (2) hilarity and serenity, as compared with neutral state, did not cause significantly discrepant performance across all five executive tasks; (3) disgust, as compared with anxiety, tended to cause more severely impaired EFs. Results of Study 2 included that after controlling for demographic and personality variables: (1) high degree of motivating/non-motivating positive emotions tended to predict poor EFs; (2) EFs mediated the relationship between motivating/non-motivating positive emotions and behavioral social outcomes. These results confirmed that motivational intensity modulated the influences of emotions on EFs.Emotions high in motivational tendency were more likely to impair EFs. Possible explanation is that such emotions are linked with specific action urges to acquire desired objects, which could impel the individual to focus cognitive resources on the goal-pursuit and thus narrow down the flexibility and complexity of cognitive processing. Practical implications in simultaneously intervening emotionality and EFs to enhance children and adolescents’ behavioral social functioning will be discussed. / Detailed summary in vernacular field only. / Detailed summary in vernacular field only. / Detailed summary in vernacular field only. / Zhou, Ya. / Thesis (Ph.D.) Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2014. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 100-113). / Abstracts also in Chinese; appendixes includes Chinese.
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Emotion regulation in adolescent females with bulimia nervosa : an information processing perspective /Sim, Leslie A., January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.) in Psychology--University of Maine, 2002. / Includes vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 146-170).
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Parents' meta-emotion philosophy, emotional intelligence and relationship to adolescent emotional intelligenceKehoe, Christiane Evelyne. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (BA(Hons) (Psychology)) - Faculty of Life and Social Sciences, Swinburne University of Technology, 2006. / "July 2006". A thesis is submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree Bachelor of Social Science with Honours in Psychology, [Faculty of Life and Social Sciences], Swinburne University of Technology - 2006. Typescript.
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Age differences in the experience of poignancy: the roles of emotion regulation and dialectical thinking. / Age differencesJanuary 2008 (has links)
Zhang, Xin. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2008. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 44-49). / Abstracts in English and Chinese. / Chapter CHAPTER ONE: --- INTRODUCTION --- p.1 / What Is Poignancy? --- p.1 / Socioemotional Selectivity Theory and Poignancy --- p.3 / Influential Psychosocial Factors --- p.4 / The Present Study --- p.9 / Chapter CHAPTER TWO: --- STUDY ONE --- p.10 / Method --- p.10 / Results and Discussion --- p.15 / Chapter CHAPTER THREE: --- STUDY TWO --- p.23 / Method --- p.23 / Results and Discussion --- p.26 / Chapter CHAPTER FOUR: --- GENERAL DISCUSSION --- p.37 / Theoretical Implications for Aging and Emotion --- p.37 / Practical Implications for Psychological Well-being of Older Adults --- p.40 / Limitation and Future Directions --- p.42 / References --- p.44 / Footnote --- p.50
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The relationship between expressed emotion and adolescent psychopathologyEdwards, Joseph Walter, January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 2006. / Title from first page of PDF file. Includes bibliographical references (p. 84-95).
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Relation of emotion regulation and the school adjustment of Hong Kong young adolescents : peer support as a mediatorCheng, Wai-yin, 鄭慧妍 January 2014 (has links)
The purpose of the current study was to investigate the relationship between emotion regulation and school adjustment in Secondary One students, and the mediation effect of peer support on such relationship. A sample of 207 adolescents completed measures of school adjustment, peer support, and emotion regulation. Results revealed that the use of expressive suppression was negatively associated with all school adjustment variables (social, personal-emotional, and academic adjustment). Cognitive reappraisal was correlated with social and personal-emotional adjustment and the relations were mediated through peer support. Results suggested that the importance of adaptive emotion regulation strategy and peer support improves students’ adjustment during school transition. Implications for education provided to early adolescents in the Hong Kong context are discussed. / published_or_final_version / Educational Psychology / Master / Master of Social Sciences
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Violent Passions: Childhood and Emotions in the Making of Modern Mexico, 1870-1910Zuniga-Nieto, Carlos Gerardo January 2016 (has links)
During the period between 1870 and 1910, the category of adolescence, increasingly defined the transitional stage between childhood and adulthood in the press, law, and in everyday practice. This emerging category included youths between the ages of fourteen and twenty-one as civil and penal codes recognized it as the transition from childhood to adulthood, a label that was picked up in the press, in scientific discourses, and in the courtrooms. Thus, this study addresses the following questions: What were the changes in the notion of childhood from the 1870s to the 1890s, and what did they signify to this period of economic, technological, social, and legal transformations? What were the ramifications of these cultural assumptions of childhood in civil and criminal law? What larger social forces did the rise of adolescence reflect? To what extent did the analysis of emotions in childhood and adolescence play a role in the cultural framework of positivism? This project chronicles the ascendance of the categories regarded culturally and legally as childhood and adolescence. It covers the period during the advent of the anti-colonial insurgency against Spain in Cuba and during the thirty-four–year period (1876-1910) when educators, criminologists, reporters, and parents took on these questions as age-based categories in civil and criminal law; and institutions organized around age became the norm in law and in everyday practice in Mexico.
While scholarship has approached the history of childhood and youth from the prism of Mexico City, this project contends that the first war for Cuban independence (1868-1878) had cultural reverberations on the Yucatán peninsula as well as on mainland Mexico. Yucatán witnessed the arrival of educators whose experiences of war in Cuba and exile to Mexico inspired them to turn their attention to the cultivation of honor and trust in children because these emotions were considered fundamental to the proper training of young Mexican citizens. The emotional training of children viewed anger as a negative emotion while the pleasant and desirable emotions of trust and honor were particularly significant in the articulation of a uniquely Mexican emotional standard of child rearing. These ideas, which emerged in the context of Cuba’s anti-colonial insurgency in 1868 against Spain served in the Yucatán peninsula as the intellectual basis for the program of emotional education, which was central to the ideology of positivism.
In the disciplines of criminology and pedagogy, the attitude toward children’s emotions degenerated to the generally negative, and the hereditary factors of working-class children informed perceptions of juvenile delinquency in the Mexican press. The press during the 1880s and 1890s generated fears about child criminality, emphasizing the emotions of envy and distrust attributed to working-class children. In the 1890s and the 1900s, newspaper chronicles of youth suicide in the press produced a cultural shift from a notion of suicide based on monomania, which affected middle-class and professional adolescents, to the concept of suicide as an expression of hereditary pathologies and moral weakness attributed to working-class youths.
Violent Passions argues that the invention of adolescence as a dangerous stage of development was forged both by fear of juvenile crime and stereotypes in the press as well as by new courtship practices among adolescents. Although parents in Yucatán asserted a strong influence over their daughters’ prolonged courting phases or plazos, increasingly minors challenged parental authority by drawing on notions of autonomy, romantic love, and their own concept of innocent girlhood as well as by making accusations against fathers. The shift from supervised and prolonged courting phases to young couples’ demands for the recognition of emotional concerns in their relationships generated perceptions of juvenile delinquency in Porfirian Yucatán.
Violent Passions contends that scholars should regard the emergence of the category of the adolescent as an ongoing cultural conversation concerning the role of emotions in the shaping of childhood and in the life stage of adolescence, which took hold in the early years of the Porfiriato. Although scholarship on youth in modern Mexico has focused on the formative identification of youth within the framework of institutions, namely, juvenile tribunals and universities, this project draws on the analytic construct of the life stage to trace the role of emotions from childhood to adolescence in Mexico. This dissertation considers the contingent demarcations in this period as well as the role of emotions in the meaning and process of attaining adolescence in modern Mexico.
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Explaining Discrepant Findings for Performance-approach Goals the Role of Emotion Regulation During Test-takingTyson, Diana F. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Duke University, 2008.
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A test of general strain theory exploring gender specific emotional and behavioral variation /Puckett, Sarah Rae. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Montana, 2008. / Title from title screen. Description based on contents viewed May 16, 2008. Includes bibliographical references (p. 39-44).
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