Sentences with phrase «negative facial expressions»

For example, it has been observed that both attachment avoidance and anxiety orient attention away from negative social signals (Dewitte et al., 2007; Dewitte and De Houwer, 2008), whereas other reports indicate early vigilance in the perception of positive and negative facial expressions for both anxious and avoidant attached individuals (Niedenthal et al., 2002).
The researchers looked at positive and negative facial expressions, so they refer to it as affect, because they have not specified which emotion it is.
Common signs for babies under the age of 4 months include waving the arms; turning the head or body away from the bottle; spitting out formula; making negative facial expressions; falling asleep; and pushing away the bottle (Ventura et al 2015).
Frowning, grimacing, and other negative facial expressions signal your brain that whatever you are doing is difficult.

Not exact matches

The first experiment compared the effect of emotive words, such as «panda» (positive) and «knife» (negative), with that of happy (positive) and angry (negative) facial expressions.
THE BLU - RAY DISC The picture's Blu - ray transfer, letterboxed to 2.35:1 and compressed using the AVC codec, is excellent, bringing out the period colours and defining facial expressions while maintaining the look of a fairly fine - grained print taken from the Super35 camera negative.
To that end, Blanchett and Mara do not disappoint, saying more with body language and facial expression in Nagy's negative space than any explicit profession of love could.
Other studies (e.g., Anderson et al., 2008) have shown that high levels of stress (such as that induced by exposure to ACEs) lead to dysregulation of the limbic system, resulting in a rewiring of the brain which causes children to be more anxious and hyper - responsive to negative social cues, such as angry facial expressions from others.
Participants» facial expressions were more pleasant when learning about a target that resembled a positive significant other rather than a negative significant other.
Thus, a set of regions typically associated with negative affect were seen to be activated when the subjects were presented with unpleasant facial expressions; however, this social aversion component can be modulated by a secure attachment style (Coan et al., 2006).
Finally, we compared the differential priming effects on processing facial expressions for both positive and negative emotional valence individually.
Results showed that accurate recognition of facial expressions of negative emotions (anger, contempt, disgust, fear, and sadness) predicted less conflict engaging behaviors during conflict with their romantic partners (but not positive problem solving and withdrawal), which in turn predicted greater relationship satisfaction.
The present study is the first to show that the ability to recognize facial expressions of negative emotions is related to romantic relationship satisfaction and that constructive responses to conflict such as less conflict engaging behaviors, mediate this process.
Children's negative emotions were observed from children's body language, facial expressions, emotional expressions, and tone of voice.
Besides a negative bias for perceived social participation, ambiguous facial emotional expressions may play an important role in the disturbed relatedness in patients with BPD.
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