Sentences with phrase «show less emotion»

When you want to win titles you need to show less emotion and be more ruthless.

Not exact matches

As a result, sleep - deprived leaders are less likely to show positive emotion to their teams, and sleep - deprived team members will be less likely to experience positive emotion.
hey mate, whenever I watch hw one man or a group of stupid individuals sit back and care less about the emotions of loyal fans it goes to show how heartless humans can be... imagine the fact that the fans pay higher than both Madrid and barca fans who are entertained by the likes of messi, Ronaldo, bale, neymar, suarez and ramos... while we pay to watch skillless players like giroud, ramsey,... imagine the fact that the likes of sanogo is still on the paylist... how does that show ambition, I'd say arsenal has been before wenger and the board themselves..
Research has shown that when parents behave harshly or unpredictably — especially at moments when their children are upset — the children are less likely over time to develop the ability to manage strong emotions and more likely to respond ineffectively to stressful situations.
Their study also showed that sleeping less than eight hours decreased individual's ability to resolve conflicts and were more likely to exhibit negative emotions.
Volunteers with psoriasis were also less likely to identify disgust in faces that showed only subtle signs of the emotion, compared with controls (Journal of Investigative Dermatology, DOI: 10.1038 / jid.2009.152).
The findings showed that in all three cases the CEO's emotions were perceived as less sincere than those of the junior employee.
They also found that the subjects who showed a larger cortisol response after taking cocaine had a less marked impairment of negative emotions.
lactis: Healthy women who consumed yogurt containing these bugs showed less activity in brain regions that process emotions and physical sensations.
Also, a depressed person is less likely to show severe mood swings, whereas someone with dementia shows a wider range of emotions and sometimes makes inappropriate emotional responses (e.g., laughing while others are sad).
Says one researcher, «Contrary to what one might expect, this study shows how the physiological reactions of alexithymic individuals to emotions induced by smells are not less but rather more intense.
A study published in PLOSone showed that people who frequently use several media devices at the same time tend to have less gray matter in a part of their brain involved with thought and emotion control.
In one study in the Journal of Psychology Science, psychologists show that when you hold in your emotions, the feeling does not have the ability to dissipate from your body, but when you identify and express the emotions, it allows your body to feel less of this emotion in your body [3].
Take Bolt for example, the loveable and stunningly adorable main character who, in less than 90 minutes, shows a wide spectrum of emotions and behavior, ranging from self - realization, denial and identity crisis.
The latest DreamWorks adventure, shown in 3D and packed with action, thrills and flaps of giant dragon wings, is a quintessential popcorn movie, in which scale, emotion and adventure are all never less then epic.
is a film that shows little and tells less, existing entirely in media res and relying on context clues and assumptions to tell a story that otherwise leans heavily on emotion to convey its plot and themes.
Midnight Special is a film that shows little and tells less, existing entirely in media res and relying on context clues and assumptions to tell a story that otherwise leans heavily on emotion to convey its plot and themes.
No internal struggle, and still no show of emotion, Nick Reyes is exactly the kind of protagonist we need less of.
The second and far less successful part of the show is broken into what Mr. Tuchman calls the «five underlying impulses within the spiritual - abstract nexus» - Cosmic Imagery, Dualities, Synesthesia, Spiritual Geometry and Vibrations (according to Mr. Tuchman, Kandinsky believed that «human emotions consist of vibrations of the soul, and that the soul is set into vibrations by nature»); each impulse was defined in Symbolist art and literature.
Call it «the Dukakis effect» — sometimes, refusing to show emotion makes you appear less credible.
Now research shows that love may be less of a mystery, a frenzy of sex and emotion and instead the result of behavior that we can apply logic to.
For the conflict event, mothers who were more anxiously attached talked more about other people's emotions than did mothers who were less anxiously attached, and mothers who cope more effectively were more engaged, more emotionally expressive, and more explanatory, and, in turn, their children showed more flexible coping.
More specifically, mothers who engage in highly elaborative reminiscing have children who come to tell more coherent and emotionally expressive autobiographical narratives, and these children also show better understanding of self and are better able to regulate emotion than children of less elaborative mothers.
Although children who have been maltreated show different brain activity in response to facial emotion than nonmaltreated children, 22 we know little about children's neural processing of a wide variety of parenting behaviours, and we know even less about temperament - related differences in such neural processing.
The results of our study, show that high self - objectification is predicted by low interoceptive awareness, implying that women who self - objectify are those who are relatively unaware of the interoceptive cues which are related to their emotions and who may also therefore experience emotion less intensely [25].
As described above, adolescents suffering from depressive symptoms often show less effective emotion regulation such as avoidance, rumination and suppression (Aldao et al. 2010).
This result is consonant with previous data, showing that children with CU traits and ODD - related problems are less sensitive to emotions that reflect others» distress, such as fear and sadness (Blair et al., 2001; Kimonis et al., 2012, 2016).
Results indicated intervention parents but not control parents, became less emotionally dismissive and increased in empathy, and children showed better emotion understanding and behavior compared to control children.
Studies have shown that individuals who experience positive emotions such as love, compassion, and gratitude, in addition to the natural negative emotions experienced during and after a crisis or painful life event, are less like to suffer from depression and more likely to develop and achieve future goals and better psychological functioning.
Follow - up surveys with hundreds of students enrolled in the program showed that, relative to a control group, those given an education in non-cognitive skills were less aggressive at school, better at identifying their emotions and more willing to work through difficult problems.
Previous research has shown that during parent - child conversations about past emotional experiences, fathers talked less about emotional aspects of the experiences and used less emotion words than mothers (Fivush et al. 2000).
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.
Because many of the previous investigations have been conducted using community samples, we asked whether we would find the same associations among anxiety, emotion understanding, emotion regulation, and attachment security, as other studies; namely that more anxious children will show more limited emotion understanding, greater difficulties regulating their emotions, and report less attachment security than less anxious children (e.g., Brumariu et al., 2012; Bender et al., 2015).
Regarding expressivity, we expected that parent - child dyads with AD children would particularly show less positive emotions, but also more negative emotions during interactions than parent - child dyads with non-AD children.
Suveg et al. (2008) showed that mothers and fathers of boys with an AD, not girls, exhibited less positive affect and more negative affect during emotion discussions than did fathers and mothers of boys without an AD.
Showing difficulties in appreciating other people's emotions and being empathic, mothers with high levels of alexithymia might appear less responsive to their children's psychological needs, unconcerned and affectively less involved in the relationship with them.
Results showed that children who reported higher levels of anxiety had more difficulties regulating their emotions (r = 0.49, p = 0.03) and thought of their attachment relationships as less secure (r = -0.49, p = 0.03).
Parent - child dyads with AD children showed less emotional flexibility by displaying a smaller repertoire of emotions, switching less between emotions, and remaining in emotions for longer periods of time compared to dyads with non-AD children.
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.
When including both fathers and mothers in emotion discussions with the child, similar emotional patterns were found showing that parents of children with an AD exhibited less positive affect during the discussions than parents of children without an AD (Hudson et al. 2008).
The findings of the current study are in line with previous studies showing that more anxious children have greater difficulties in regulating their emotions (e.g., Carthy et al., 2010), and experience attachment relationships with their parents as less secure (e.g., Colonnesi et al., 2011).
This item was reverse coded to provide a measure of emotional regulation, and higher scores indicated that children appeared to be more emotionally regulated (i.e. showed less displays of negative emotions).
To date, research has indicated that parents of AD children show less supportive responses to their children's displays of not only anxiety, but also their expressions of other negative emotions (e.g., sadness and anger) when compared to non-anxiety disordered (non-AD) children.
Confirming mother's self - reports, observers also have found that mothers of AD children show greater use of non-supportive parenting (e.g., criticism and talking over the child) and less use of supportive parenting (e.g., warmth) when responding to children's negative emotions than mothers of non-AD children (Hudson et al. 2008).
The present study has also shown a correlation between increasing age and less frequent reliance upon emotion oriented coping styles among the homeless (Table 3).
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