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Aqsa Mehreen; Zulqurnain Ali – International Journal for Educational and Vocational Guidance, 2024
Career shocks (CS) avert recipients' growth and consider the main hurdle in the development of employees' career. Such shocks (positive/negative) significantly affect employees. Drawing on affective events theory (AET), this study conceptualizes CS as affective events which produce negative/positive behavior among individuals. Therefore, this…
Descriptors: Career Development, Employee Attitudes, Family Work Relationship, Family Influence
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Josué García-Arch; Solenn Friedrich; Xiongbo Wu; David Cucurell; Lluís Fuentemilla – Cognitive Science, 2024
Our self-concept is constantly faced with self-relevant information. Prevailing research suggests that information's valence plays a central role in shaping our self-views. However, the need for stability within the self-concept structure and the inherent alignment of positive feedback with the pre-existing self-views of healthy individuals might…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Feedback (Response), Congruence (Psychology), Emotional Response
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Reinhard Pekrun – Educational Psychology Review, 2024
In its original version, control-value theory describes and explains achievement emotions. More recently, the theory has been expanded to also explain epistemic, social, and existential emotions. In this article, I outline the development of the theory, from preliminary work in the 1980s to early versions of the theory and the recent generalized…
Descriptors: Theories, Psychological Patterns, Achievement, Taxonomy
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Virginia Clinton-Lisell; Alexia M. Langowski – Reading Psychology, 2024
It is well known that misinformation's effects on memory linger, referred to as the continued influence effect, even after reading corrections. However, it is uncertain how the reading medium and epistemic emotions (relevant to knowledge construction) relate to the continued influence effect. In this study, college students (N = 84) read about…
Descriptors: College Students, Misinformation, Printed Materials, Electronic Learning
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Érika Cinegaglia Viz Leutwiler; Elisa Maria Barbosa de Amorim-Ribeiro; Rebeca Grangeiro – International Journal of Emotional Education, 2024
The role of higher education teachers (HETs) encompasses a multitude of responsibilities and requires continual professional development to meet job demands. Yet, these HETs encounter challenging conditions within work environments, which can adversely impact their performance as well as their physical and mental health. Moreover, the nature of…
Descriptors: Literature Reviews, Higher Education, Emotional Response, College Faculty
Kimberly A. Bain – ProQuest LLC, 2024
In identifying ways to create inclusive spaces in the classroom, instructors should not be limited by singular modes of discourse to engage students. Particularly when teaching first-year students who seek to invent the university and claim their intellectual space within it, these considerations must be deeply integrated into the course…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, College Freshmen, Persuasive Discourse, Emotional Response
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Yi Sun; Hongbiao Yin – Social Psychology of Education: An International Journal, 2024
Using Habermas's three human interests as a philosophical lens, a typology of emotion regulation was developed based on previous work. There are three theoretical perspectives on emotion regulation. The first perspective, "emotion regulation as steps," considers emotion regulation as an individual phenomenon and detachable entity. The…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Self Control, Psychological Patterns, Educational Research
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Zhao, Li; Li, Yingying; Sun, Wenjin; Zheng, Yi; Harris, Paul L. – Developmental Science, 2023
There is extensive research on the development of cheating in early childhood but research on how to reduce it is rare. The present preregistered study examined whether telling young children about a story character's emotional reactions towards cheating could significantly reduce their tendency to cheat (N = 400; 199 boys; Age: 3-6 years).…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Ethics, Cheating, Incidence
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Yin, Yue; Shanks, David R.; Li, Baike; Fan, Tian; Hu, Xiao; Yang, Chunliang; Luo, Liang – Metacognition and Learning, 2023
Emotional information pervades experiences in daily life. Numerous studies have established that emotional materials and information are easier to remember than neutral ones, a phenomenon known as the emotional salience effect on memory. In recent years, an emerging body of research has begun to explore the effect of emotion on metamemory.…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Emotional Response, Emotional Experience, Learning
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Cooper, Alexandra M.; Reschke, Peter J.; Porter, Chris L.; Coyne, Sarah M.; Stockdale, Laura A.; Graver, Haley; Siufanua, Matthew; Rogers, Adam; Walle, Eric A. – Developmental Psychology, 2023
Parents play an important role in socializing children's emotion understanding. Previous research shows that parents emphasize different aspects of emotion contexts depending on the discrete emotion. However, there is limited research on how parents and children discuss self-conscious emotions, such as embarrassment, guilt, and shame, and what…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Self Concept, Psychological Patterns, Emotional Response
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Lauren E. Philbrook – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly: Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2023
The present study examined children's diurnal cortisol as a moderator of the association between parenting sensitivity at bedtime and young children's executive functioning and emotion regulation. Fifty-one children (M[subscript age] = 4.47 years) and their families participated. Parenting sensitivity was assessed from video recordings of child…
Descriptors: Young Children, Physiology, Parenting Styles, Executive Function
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M. F. Werkman; J. A. Landsman; A. S. Fokkens; Y. M. Dijkxhoorn; I. A. van Berckelaer-Onnes; S. Begeer; S. A. Reijneveld – Review Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2023
Autism spectrum disorder and intellectual disability (ID) are linked to atypical sensory processing, but consensus lacks on the impact of their co-occurrence. We studied the impact of the presence of ID in autistic individuals on (1) sensory processing and (2) the relation between sensory processing and behavioral outcomes. A systematic review was…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disability, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Sensory Experience, Emotional Response
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Mateo Leganes-Fonteneau; Daniel Cseh; Theodora Duka – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
Evidence for implicit aversive learning effects has been criticized for its lack of experimental rigor and statistical reliability. Here we examine whether attentional emotional responses to aversive conditioned stimuli can occur in the absence of stimulus-outcome contingency awareness, and use a novel Bayesian tool to reliably perform a post hoc…
Descriptors: Attention, Emotional Response, Conditioning, Responses
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Allie M. Spiekerman; Amanda J. Rose – Developmental Psychology, 2024
The present study examined how friends' responses to each other during problem talk predicted depressive symptoms over time. Participants included 271 adolescent friend dyads (69 female and 69 male early adolescent dyads; 72 female and 61 male middle adolescent dyads; 66.4% White and 26.6% Black). The adolescents were observed discussing a problem…
Descriptors: Grade 7, Grade 10, Friendship, Dialogs (Language)
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Julie A. Hubbard; Christina C. Moore; Lindsay Zajac; Elizabeth Marano; Megan K. Bookhout; Mary Dozier – Applied Developmental Science, 2024
Although children display strong individual differences in emotion expression, they also engage in emotional synchrony or reciprocity with interaction partners. To understand this paradox between trait-like and dyadic influences, the goal of the current study was to investigate children's emotion expression using a Social Relations Model (SRM)…
Descriptors: Individual Differences, Childrens Attitudes, Emotional Response, Psychological Patterns
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