20 results match your criteria: "Center for Change[Affiliation]"
Cogn Emot
June 2023
Center for Change and Complexity in Learning, The University of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia.
This study measured hand and head action strengths of eight typical emotional states using an authentic but implicit emotion elicitation task. Participants listened to and then retold five stories in which eight typical emotional states were experienced by the narrators. The number of hand and head gestures that occur naturally while experiencing an emotional state was used as an index to determine the hand and head action strength of that emotional state.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntegr Psychol Behav Sci
September 2023
Facultad de Educación, Psicología y Familia, Universidad Finis Terrae, Santiago, Chile.
The role of gestural schematization in enhancing thinking processes has been the subject of a large body of works. In this process, contextually unimportant or irrelevant information related to a concept (or a system of concepts) is deleted or ignored, while relevant spatial information is maintained. This process is a special type of inhibition, which is one of the key components of executive functions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
October 2022
Center for Change and Complexity in Learning, The University of South Australia, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
This article discusses perspective and frame of reference in the metaphorical description of mathematical concepts in terms of motions, gestures, and embodied actions. When a mathematical concept is described metaphorically in terms of gestures, embodied actions, or fictive motions, the motor system comes into play to ground and understand that concept. Every motion, gesture, or embodied action involves a perspective and a frame of reference.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Hum Behav
December 2022
Department of Medical and Surgical Sciences, 'Magna Graecia' University of Catanzaro, Catanzaro, Italy.
Following theories of emotional embodiment, the facial feedback hypothesis suggests that individuals' subjective experiences of emotion are influenced by their facial expressions. However, evidence for this hypothesis has been mixed. We thus formed a global adversarial collaboration and carried out a preregistered, multicentre study designed to specify and test the conditions that should most reliably produce facial feedback effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Crit Care
September 2022
Janelle L. B. Macintosh is an associate professor, Brigham Young University College of Nursing, Provo, Utah.
Background: Critical access hospitals were created to bring health care to rural populations. These hospitals lack equipment and resources, but the nurses who work there still provide end-of-life care to critically ill and dying patients.
Objective: To determine how nurses in critical access hospitals perceive the size of obstacles and helpful behaviors for the provision of end-of-life care.
Background: Depression and anxiety outcome measures, safety/tolerability, patient satisfaction, and ease of implementation of group-based ketamine-assisted psychotherapy (G-KAP) delivered to patients in intensive residential eating disorder (ED) treatment were assessed.
Case Presentation: This study reports on five participants with a diagnosis of an ED and comorbid mood and anxiety disorders who received weekly intramuscular ketamine injections in a group setting over 4 weeks. Measures of anxiety (GAD-7) and depression (PHQ-9) were administered pre-dose, 4-h post-dose, and 24-h post dose.
Integr Psychol Behav Sci
December 2024
Center for Change and Complexity in Learning, The University of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia.
This article discusses the role of gestures in enhancing inhibition, working memory, and cognitive flexibility as the three components of executive functions during the processing of mathematical concepts that are metaphorically described in terms of motion events. Gestures can contribute to the process of inhibition by highlighting the relevant information and keeping the irrelevant information out of focus of attention. Gestures contribute to working memory in two ways during mathematical processing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Eat Disord
November 2021
Eating Recovery Center, 4708 Alliance Blvd, Suite 300, Plano, TX, 75093, USA.
Background: Several unsuccessful attempts have been made to reach a cross-disciplinary consensus on issues fundamental to the field of eating disorders in the United States (U.S.).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Promot Int
December 2021
Faculty of Business and Law , Deakin Business School, Melbourne, Australia.
The investigation of the characteristics and attributes that make a brand prominent for shoppers is known as salience research. This line of study concentrates on influencing buying behaviors via the manipulation of shopping environments and food products. Such promotional strategies successfully attract massive food sales and therefore have been associated with changes in dietary patterns and the epidemic expansion of non-communicable diseases, like obesity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Cult Cogn Sci
January 2021
Faculty of Arts and Science, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan.
Smiling is believed to make people look younger. Ganel and Goodale (Psychon Bull Rev 25(6):612-616, 10.3758/s13423-017-1306-8, 2018) proposed that this belief is a misconception rooted in popular media, based on their findings that people actually perceive smiling faces as older.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Psychol Res (Medellin)
January 2020
. Universidad del Norte, Barranquilla, Colombia. Universidad del Norte Universidad del Norte Barranquilla Colombia.
Semantic memory (SM) is a type of long-term memory associated with the storage of general information about the world. Here we assessed the characteristics of the SM battery, developed by Catricalà et al. (2013), in a sample of Colombian children.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Cogn
August 2019
Faculty of Arts and Science, Kyushu University, JP.
Previous research has suggested that oral respiration may disturb cognitive function and health. The present study investigated whether oral respiration negatively affects visual attentional processing during a visual search task. Participants performed a visual search task in the following three breathing conditions: wearing a nasal plug, wearing surgical tape over their mouths, or no modification (oral vs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEat Weight Disord
December 2019
School of Psychological Sciences, University of Northern Colorado, Campus Box 94, Greeley, CO, USA.
Purpose: In recent years, there has been growing interest in pathologically healthful eating, often called orthorexia nervosa (ON). Much of the literature in this area has been about point prevalence of ON in particular populations, which range from less than 1% to nearly 90% depending on the study. Despite this interest, there has been no extensive examination of whether those with pathologically healthful eating are detected by screening instruments that identify disordered eating.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEat Disord
June 2017
a Center for Change, Orem , Utah , USA.
The present article reports on a 2-year pilot study that evaluated the effectiveness of an intuitive eating program for patients in an eating disorder treatment center. Standardized measures of intuitive eating and eating disorder and psychological symptoms were administered. Psychotherapists and dietitians rated patients on the healthiness of their eating attitudes and behaviors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEat Disord
September 2015
a Center for Change, Orem , Utah , USA.
Health Aff (Millwood)
July 2013
Center for Change, Orem, UT, USA.
J Clin Psychol
February 2009
Center for Change, Orem, Utah, USA.
The authors describe a psychological treatment for women with eating disorders who have theistic spiritual beliefs and illustrate its application with a case report. They begin by briefly summarizing a theistic view of eating disorders. Then they illustrate how a theistic approach can complement traditional treatment by describing the processes and outcomes of their work with a 23-year-old Christian woman receiving inpatient treatment for an eating disorder not otherwise specified and a major depressive disorder (recurrent severe).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEat Disord
December 2007
Center for Change, Orem, Utah, USA.
The relationships among trauma, eating disorders, and spirituality are complex. Both trauma and eating disorders can distance women from their own spirituality, which undermines a potentially important treatment resource. In this article, we offer suggestions based on our clinical experience for helping eating disorder patients who have suffered trauma to rediscover their faith and spirituality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEat Disord
June 2007
Center for Change, Orem, Utah, USA.
The purpose of this study was to experimentally examine the effects of exposure to the thin-ideal body image on women's affect, self-esteem, body satisfaction, eating disorder symptoms, and level of internalization of the thin-ideal. College women (N=145) were randomly exposed to photographs from popular magazines containing either thin-ideal images or neutral images. Exposure to thin-ideal magazine images increased body dissatisfaction, negative mood states, and eating disorder symptoms and decreased self-esteem, although it did not cause more internalization of the thin-ideal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEat Disord
June 2007
Center for Change, Orem, Utah 84057, USA.
This study investigated the relationship of religious orientation, religious affiliation, and spiritual well-being with treatment outcomes in an eating disorder inpatient treatment program. Participants were 251 women diagnosed with an eating disorder. Gain scores on the Eating Attitudes Test, Body Shape Questionnaire, Outcome Questionnaire 45.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF