45 results match your criteria: "University of Malaga Malaga[Affiliation]"
Front Psychol
July 2016
Department of Psychology, Faculty of Education Science, University of Cádiz Cádiz, Spain.
Front Behav Neurosci
June 2016
Department of Basic Psychology, Faculty of Psychology, University of Málaga Malaga, Spain.
Although emotion and cognition were considered to be separate aspects of the psyche in the past, researchers today have demonstrated the existence of an interplay between the two processes. Emotional intelligence (EI), or the ability to perceive, use, understand, and regulate emotions, is a relatively young concept that attempts to connect both emotion and cognition. While EI has been demonstrated to be positively related to well-being, mental and physical health, and non-aggressive behaviors, little is known about its underlying cognitive processes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
April 2016
Department of Evolutionary and Educational Psychology, Faculty of Psychology, University of Granada Granada, Spain.
Front Chem
March 2016
Department of Material Sciences and Process Engineering, University of Natural Resources and Life SciencesVienna, Austria; Institute for Building Materials, Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule ZürichZürich, Switzerland; Applied Wood Research Laboratory, Empa-Swiss Federal Laboratories for Material Testing and ResearchDübendorf, Switzerland.
Waterproofing of the aerial organs of plants imposed a big evolutionary step during the colonization of the terrestrial environment. The main plant polymers responsible of water repelling are lipids and lignin, which play also important roles in the protection against biotic/abiotic stresses, regulation of flux of gases and solutes, and mechanical stability against negative pressure, among others. While the lipids, non-polymerized cuticular waxes together with the polymerized cutin, protect the outer surface, lignin is confined to the secondary cell wall within mechanical important tissues.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
February 2016
Department of Social Psychology, Faculty of Psychology, University of Málaga Málaga, Spain.
Much attention has been paid to the psychological processes underlying the improvement in mood states and human well-being, particularly during adolescence. Theoretical and empirical research suggests that emotional skills may play a role in enhancing perceived well-being; however, the mechanisms involved in during adolescence are unclear. The purpose of this study was to extend understanding by investigating the potential mediators of the relationship between emotional intelligence (EI) and life satisfaction in a 2-years study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
January 2016
Department of Systems Neuroscience, Institut d'Investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i SunyerBarcelona, Spain; Event Lab, Department of Personality, Evaluation and Psychological Treatment, University of BarcelonaBarcelona, Spain; Institució Catalana de Recerca i Estudis AvançatsBarcelona, Spain; Department of Basic Psychology, Universidad de BarcelonaBarcelona, Spain.
Music is a potent mood regulator that can induce relaxation and reduce anxiety in different situations. While several studies demonstrate that certain types of music have a subjective anxiolytic effect, the reported results from physiological responses are less conclusive. Virtual reality allows us to study diverse scenarios of real life under strict experimental control while preserving high ecological validity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
January 2016
Department of Basic Psychology, University of Malaga Málaga, Spain.
Emotion regulation (ER) is a basic psychological process that has been broadly linked to psychosocial adjustment. Due to its relationship with psychosocial adjustment, a significant number of instruments have been developed to assess emotion regulation in a reliable and valid manner. Among these, the Emotion Regulation Questionnaire (ERQ; Gross and John, 2003) is one of the most widely used, having shown good psychometric properties with adult samples from different cultures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
December 2015
Department of Basic Psychology, Faculty of Psychology, University of Málaga Málaga, Spain.
The relationship between intelligence quotient (IQ) and cognitive control processes has been extensively established. Several studies have shown that IQ correlates with cognitive control abilities, such as interference suppression, as measured with experimental tasks like the Stroop and Flanker tasks. By contrast, there is a debate about the role of Emotional Intelligence (EI) in individuals' cognitive control abilities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Hum Neurosci
November 2015
Cognitive Neurology and Aphasia Unit and Cathedra Foundation Morera and Vallejo of Aphasia, Centro de Investigaciones Médico-Sanitarias, University of Malaga Malaga, Spain.
Lesion-symptom mapping studies reveal that selective damage to one or more components of the speech production network can be associated with foreign accent syndrome, changes in regional accent (e.g., from Parisian accent to Alsatian accent), stronger regional accent, or re-emergence of a previously learned and dormant regional accent.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Microbiol
November 2015
Biomarkers and Nutrimetabolomic Lab., Nutrition and Food Science Department, XaRTA, INSA, Campus Torribera, Pharmacy Faculty, University of Barcelona Barcelona, Spain.
Gut microbiota has recently been proposed as a crucial environmental factor in the development of metabolic diseases such as obesity and type 2 diabetes, mainly due to its contribution in the modulation of several processes including host energy metabolism, gut epithelial permeability, gut peptide hormone secretion, and host inflammatory state. Since the symbiotic interaction between the gut microbiota and the host is essentially reflected in specific metabolic signatures, much expectation is placed on the application of metabolomic approaches to unveil the key mechanisms linking the gut microbiota composition and activity with disease development. The present review aims to summarize the gut microbial-host co-metabolites identified so far by targeted and untargeted metabolomic studies in humans, in association with impaired glucose homeostasis and/or obesity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
November 2015
Department of Personality, Evaluation and Psychological Treatment, University of Malaga Malaga, Spain.
This article examined the moderating role of a central core dimension of emotional intelligence-emotion-regulation ability-in the relationship between perceived stress and indicators of well-being (depression and subjective happiness) in a sample from a community adult population. The relationships for males and females on these dimensions were also compared. Results revealed that emotion-regulation abilities moderated both the association between perceived stress and depression/happiness for the total sample.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Microbiol
February 2015
Laboratory of Cell Cycles of Algae, Centre Algatech, Institute of Microbiology Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic Třeboň, Czech Republic.
Lanthanides are biologically non-essential elements with wide applications in technology and industry. Their concentration as environmental contaminants is, therefore, increasing. Although non-essential, lanthanides have been proposed (and even used) to produce beneficial effects in plants, even though their mechanisms of action are unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Hum Neurosci
October 2014
Neuroscience and Aphasia Research Unit, School of Psychological Sciences, University of Manchester UK.
Front Comput Neurosci
September 2014
ISIS Group, Department of Electronic Technology, University of Málaga Málaga, Spain.
Artificial vision systems cannot process all the information that they receive from the world in real time because it is highly expensive and inefficient in terms of computational cost. Inspired by biological perception systems, artificial attention models pursuit to select only the relevant part of the scene. On human vision, it is also well established that these units of attention are not merely spatial but closely related to perceptual objects (proto-objects).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Aging Neurosci
March 2014
Department of Basic Psychology, Faculty of Psychology, University of Málaga Málaga, Spain.
Numerous studies have suggested that educational history, as a proxy measure of active cognitive reserve, protects against age-related cognitive decline and risk of dementia. Whether educational history also protects against age-related decline in emotional intelligence (EI) is unclear. The present study examined ability EI in 310 healthy adults ranging in age from 18 to 76 years using the Mayer-Salovey-Caruso Emotional Intelligence Test (MSCEIT).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Previous studies have found a significant correlation between parents and offspring regarding overweight and obesity in general population at early life stages. However this issue has received no attention in people with intellectual disability (ID). Therefore, the present study was designed to find out potential correlations in overweight/obesity between young adult women with ID living in the family and their parents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: The various diagnostic classifications in the literature concur as regards the important role of abdominal obesity in the onset and progression of metabolic syndrome. Accordingly, this study was aimed at clarifying whether central obesity measurements assessed by dual X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) may predict metabolic syndrome in Spanish postmenopausal women.
Material And Methods: This historical cohort study included a total of 1326 postmenopausal women aged > 45 years old who had routinely undergone DXA to measure their bone mineral density between January 2006 and January 2011.
Front Hum Neurosci
January 2014
Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaga Malaga, Spain.
Assessment of brain-damaged subjects presenting with dissociated repetition deficits after selective injury to either the left dorsal or ventral auditory pathways can provide further insight on their respective roles in verbal repetition. We evaluated repetition performance and its neural correlates using multimodal imaging (anatomical MRI, DTI, fMRI, and(18)FDG-PET) in a female patient with transcortical motor aphasia (TCMA) and in a male patient with conduction aphasia (CA) who had small contiguous but non-overlapping left perisylvian infarctions. Repetition in the TCMA patient was fully preserved except for a mild impairment in nonwords and digits, whereas the CA patient had impaired repetition of nonwords, digits and word triplet lists.
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October 2013
Unit of Cognitive Neurology and Aphasia, Centro de Investigaciones, Médico-Sanitarias, University of Málaga Malaga, Spain ; Unit of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Carlos Haya University Hospital Malaga, Spain.
Knowledge on the patterns of repetition amongst individuals who develop language deficits in association with right hemisphere lesions (crossed aphasia) is very limited. Available data indicate that repetition in some crossed aphasics experiencing phonological processing deficits is not heavily influenced by lexical-semantic variables (lexicality, imageability, and frequency) as is regularly reported in phonologically-impaired cases with left hemisphere damage. Moreover, in view of the fact that crossed aphasia is rare, information on the role of right cortical areas and white matter tracts underpinning language repetition deficits is scarce.
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