enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Valence (psychology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valence_(psychology)

    Valence is an inferred criterion from instinctively generated emotions; it is the property specifying whether feelings/affects are positive, negative or neutral. [2] The existence of at least temporarily unspecified valence is an issue for psychological researchers who reject the existence of neutral emotions (e.g. surprise, sublimation). [2]

  3. Mood (psychology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mood_(psychology)

    Mood also differs from temperament or personality traits which are even longer-lasting. Nevertheless, personality traits such as optimism and neuroticism predispose certain types of moods. Long-term disturbances of mood such as clinical depression and bipolar disorder are considered mood disorders. Mood is an internal, subjective state, but it ...

  4. Gnomic aspect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gnomic_aspect

    Used to describe an aspect, the gnomic is considered neutral by not limiting the flow of time to any particular conception (for example, the conceptions of time as continuous, habitual, perfective, etc.). Used to describe a mood, the gnomic is considered neutral by not limiting the expression of words to the speaker's attitude toward them (e.g ...

  5. Euthymia (medicine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euthymia_(medicine)

    In psychiatry and psychology, euthymia is a normal, tranquil mental state or mood. [1] People with mood disorders, including major depressive disorder and bipolar disorder, experience euthymia as a stable mood state that is neither depressive nor manic. Achieving and maintaining euthymia is the goal of treatment for bipolar patients in ...

  6. Affect (psychology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affect_(psychology)

    Affect, in psychology, is the underlying experience of feeling, emotion, attachment, or mood. [1] It encompasses a wide range of emotional states and can be positive ...

  7. Vedanā - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vedanā

    Vedanā (Pāli and Sanskrit: वेदना) is an ancient term traditionally translated as either "feeling" [1] or "sensation." [2] In general, vedanā refers to the pleasant, unpleasant and neutral sensations that occur when our internal sense organs come into contact with external sense objects and the associated consciousness.

  8. Popular asthma drug Singulair could be linked to mental ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/popular-asthma-drug-singulair-could...

    Brain receptors in charge of mood. The brain receptors that the drug is binding to are involved in, but are not limited to the following, according to Reuters: Governing mood. Impulse control ...

  9. Negative-state relief model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negative-state_relief_model

    Subjects were divided into 3 groups – happy, neutral and sad mood groups. Half of the subjects in each group were made to believe that their induced mood was fixed temporarily. Another half group believed that their mood was changeable. The results showed that saddened subjects helped more when they believed that their mood was changeable.