Sentences with phrase «e.g. expression of feelings»

Behavioural adjustment — positive social behaviours (e.g. expression of feelings, positive interactions, assertiveness), problem behaviours (e.g. aggression and rebelliousness) and drug use, legal and illegal

Not exact matches

Modern expressions of reason were deformed into either an extrinsicism (positivism) or an immanentism (idealism) in which nature and history, science and morality, fact and value, bureaucracy and community, knowing and feeling, were (1) either sundered from one another in various forms of dualism, e.g., mechanism - vitalism, scientism - emotivisrn, etc., (2) or were conflated into various forms of monism, e.g., materialism, idealism, etc. (LL 66 - 79, 146 - 53, 213 - 19, 245 - 64, 285 - 94, SV 1 - 60).
The 27 items are divided among three subscales which assess the support and sense of togetherness between family members (e.g., «We put a lot of energy into what we do at home»); the extent to which family members express their thoughts and feelings (e.g., «Family members often feel like keeping their feelings to themselves») and; the expression of negative emotions towards members of the family unit (e.g., «Family members sometimes get so angry they throw things»).
Although the observed support behaviors were coded into 10 categories, we analyzed the data for only the following categories in the current study: (1) Positive support seeking (e.g., gives clear analysis of the problem, recognizes partner as an aid, agrees with provider's suggestions); (2) Negative support seeking (e.g., rejects help, criticizes the support provider, makes demands for support, complains); (3) Positive emotional support provision (e.g., reassures, encourages expression of feelings, provides genuine encouragement); (4) Positive instrumental support provision (e.g., offers specific plan or assistance, gives helpful advice); (5) Negative support provision (e.g., criticizes, minimizes problem, is inattentive, offers unhelpful advice).
More specifically, the FEEL - KJ assesses the emotion regulation strategies Problem Solving (e.g., «I try to change what makes me angry»), Distraction (e.g., «I do something fun»), Forgetting (e.g., «I think it will pass»), Acceptance (e.g., «I accept what makes me angry»), Humor Enhancement (e.g., «I think about things that make me happy»), Cognitive Problem Solving (e.g., «I think about what I can do»), Revaluation (e.g., «I tell myself it is nothing important»), Giving Up (e.g., «I don't want to do anything»), Withdrawal (e.g., «I don't want to see anyone»), Rumination (e.g., «I can not get it out of my head»), Self - Devaluation (e.g., «I blame myself»), Aggressive Actions (e.g., «I get into a quarrel with others»), Social Support (e.g., «I tell someone how I am doing»), Expression (e.g., «I express my anger»), and Emotional Control (e.g., «I keep my feelings for myself»).
Most measures assess family organization (e.g., roles, leadership, and alliance formation), cohesion (e.g., involvement and closeness), communication (e.g., clarity of expression and directness), affective environment (e.g., expression of feelings and conflict), and problem solving ability (e.g., goal - directed negotiation and task accomplishment) to capture the most elemental components of the operations of the family.
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