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  2. Emotion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotion

    A common way in which emotions are conceptualized in sociology is in terms of the multidimensional characteristics including cultural or emotional labels (for example, anger, pride, fear, happiness), physiological changes (for example, increased perspiration, changes in pulse rate), expressive facial and body movements (for example, smiling ...

  3. Emotion in animals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotion_in_animals

    Emotion has been observed and further researched through multiple different approaches including that of behaviourism, comparative, anecdotal, specifically Darwin's approach and what is most widely used today the scientific approach which has a number of subfields including functional, mechanistic, cognitive bias tests, self-medicating, spindle ...

  4. Social emotions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_emotions

    For example, guilt is the discomfort and regret one feels over one's wrongdoing. [27] It is a social emotion, because it requires the perception that another person is being hurt by this act; and it also has implication in morality, such that the guilty actor, in virtue of feeling distressed and guilty, accepts responsibility for the wrongdoing ...

  5. How Emma Stone found her ‘most joyous role’ in ‘Poor Things’

    www.aol.com/emma-stone-found-her-most-170308881.html

    “She is so emotionally aware, the way she was tracking her character. The way that she was able to step into all different points of her character’s development, regardless of shooting order.”

  6. Craig Melvin Emotionally Reflects on Landing“ Today”'s Top ...

    www.aol.com/craig-melvin-emotionally-reflects...

    As he took on new positions as a NBC News correspondent, then Weekend Today co-anchor and Dateline Extra anchor, he pitched ideas for Today. “I remember being just awestruck,” he says of ...

  7. Discrete emotion theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discrete_emotion_theory

    Discrete emotion theory is the claim that there is a small number of core emotions.For example, Silvan Tomkins (1962, 1963) concluded that there are nine basic affects which correspond with what we come to know as emotions: interest, enjoyment, surprise, distress, fear, anger, shame, dissmell (reaction to bad smell) and disgust.

  8. Emotions and culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotions_and_culture

    The term emotive, coined by anthropologist William Reddy, attempts to distinguish societal emotional values and expressions from individual's emotional experience. In The Making of Romantic Love , Reddy argues that romantic love is a 12th-century European construct, built in response to the parochial view that sexual desire was immoral, and was ...

  9. Emotional self-regulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotional_self-regulation

    This showing that as we age, we gain a better understanding of situation modification and being able to emotionally self-regulate. [22] Examples of situation modification may include injecting humor into a speech to elicit laughter [23] or extending the physical distance between oneself and another person. [24]