A new issue of Cognition & Emotion is out. It contains articles on emotionally evocative music, emotional intelligence, and gender-by-race emotional differences.
Editorial |
p. 1 |
Jan De Houwer, Dirk Hermans |
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Play it again Sam: Repeated exposure to emotionally evocative music polarises liking and smiling responses, and influences other affective reports, facial EMG, and heart rate |
p. 3 |
Charlotte V. O. Witvliet, Scott R. Vrana |
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On the criterion and incremental validity of trait emotional intelligence |
p. 26 |
K. V. Petrides, Juan Carlos Pérez-González, Adrian Furnham |
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Interactional appraisal models for the anger appraisals of threatened self-esteem, other-blame, and frustration |
p. 56 |
Peter Kuppens, Iven Van Mechelen |
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Cognitive, affective and social mechanisms in depression risk: Cognition, hostility, and coping style |
p. 78 |
Rick E. Ingram, Lucy Trenary, Mica Odom, Leandra Berry, Tyler Nelson |
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Emotional approach and problem-focused coping: A comparison of potentially adaptive strategies |
p. 95 |
John P. Baker, Howard Berenbaum |
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Psychopathy and verbal emotion processing in non-incarcerated malesThis work was based on an undergraduate honors thesis at Harvard College by the first author. |
p. 119 |
L. Stephen Long, Debra A. Titone |
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An experimental investigation of daytime monitoring for sleep-related threat in primary insomnia |
p. 146 |
Christina Neitzert Semler, Allison G. Harvey |
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Gender differences in emotional response among European Americans and Hmong Americans |
p. 162 |
Yulia E. Chentsova-Dutton, Jeanne L. Tsai |
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Psychophysiological and subjective indices of emotion as a function of age and genderThis research comprised the doctoral dissertation of the first author presented to the Department of Psychology at the University of South Carolina in partial fulfilment of the PhD degree. |
p. 182 |
Louisa Burriss, D. A. Powell, Jeffrey White |
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Altered processing of health threat words as a function of hypochondriacal tendencies and experimentally manipulated control beliefsPortions of this paper were presented at the 14th Annual Convention of the American Psychological Society, New Orleans, 5 June 2002, and at the Congressional Briefing on Reactions to Terrorism, 18 June 2002. |
p. 211 |
Len Lecci, Dale Cohen |