Moral Emotions
Emotions through Childhood
Emotions and Thinking
Emotional Disorders
Emotional Wellbeing
100

What are the two moral dimensions proposed by Gray and Wagner?

Agent/patient

Help/Harm

100

Parents who opt for this approach, compared to an emotion dismissing approach, are more accurate at labeling emotions. 

Emotion coaching

100

Define the 2 systems popularized by Daniel Kahneman in his novel Thinking Fast and Slow

System 1: Fast, involuntary, based on heuristics

System 2: Slow, effortful, deliberate

100

People with this psychotic disorder tend to express less emotionality, even though they experience the same intensity and variety of emotions. 

Schizophrenia

100

Feeling sad and anxious often leads us to be more attentive to ______ processes, events, and information.

emotion congruent

200

According to Gray and Wagner, beneficiaries elicit these two moral emotions

Relief and happiness

200

The "Strange Situation" experiment elicits a great deal of anger and an unwillingness to be comforted in children who have this type of attachment.

Ambivalent

200

Barbara Fredrickson proposed this theory to explain the function of positive emotions. 

Broaden and build

200

____is an example of an externalizing emotion, and ____ is an example of an internalizing emotion.

Externalizing: Anger

Internalizing: Anxiety, depression

200

What is one consequence of high allostatic load?

Development of a profile of hyperreactivity.

300

According to Gray and Wegner,  anger and disgust are emotions elicited by villains, which occupy which space in their morality graph?

agent/harm

300

Although we tend to become more conscientious, and emotionally stable as we age, there is a sharp dip in these traits at this life stage.

Adolescence (the disruption hypothesis)

300

Schwarz and Clore (1983) found that when asked about how satisfied they were with their lives, participants tended to report lower satisfaction on rainy days compared to sunny days. This is an example of the _____ perspective, which explains how we use emotions to guide our thinking. 

Affect as information

300

This hypothesis suggests that emotional disorders are caused by both inherent vulnerability and a triggereing event. 

Diathesis-stress hypothesis

300

How are adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) linked to psychological disorders?

As the number of ACEs increase, so too does physiological stress, in turn increasing the likelihood of psychopathology

400

According to Haidt, an emotion that can be triggered by "triumphs, tragedies, or transgressions that do not directly touch the self" is called a _____.

Disinterested elicitor

400

The fact that a child is likely to choose friends with a similar personality and temperament as their own is an example of this type of gene-environment correlation. 

Active (selection; there's also evocative and passive)

400

Negative emotions, and especially anxiety, tend to do this to our attentional focus

Narrows our focus

400

Circumstances of an individual's life can influence the activity of their genes, which is known as _____

Epigenetics

400

Which common mental disorder is considered the largest contributor to disability worldwide?

Major depressive disorder

500

According to Haidt's theory of moral emotions, compassion is high along the dimensions of both _____ and _____.

Disintereseted elicitor and pro-sociality of action tendencies.

500

A multilevel perspective to understanding the development of children's emotionality includes distal factors such as _____ and proximal factors such as ______. 

Distal: Socioeconomic influences, neighborhoods, and schools

Proximal: Relationships with family and friends

500

Frederic Bartlett (1932) asked participants to recall a story they read 2.5 years prior. One participant mis-remembered that the funeral in the story took place at sunset instead of at sunrise. This mistake was likely due to the participant's ____ about funerals. 

Schema (specifically, his cultural schema). 

500

Although negative thoughts about a distressing event are normal, brooding on distress in a repetivite, non-problem solving way, can lead to depression. This is known as ______

Rumination

500

Ambrose avoids leaving his house for any reason, and experiences panic attacks if he is forced to go outside. Which diagnosis best fits Ambrose’s symptoms?

Agoraphobia

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