Academic literature on the topic 'Anticipatory feeling'

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Journal articles on the topic "Anticipatory feeling"

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Carlson, Joshua M., Tsafrir Greenberg, Denis Rubin, and Lilianne R. Mujica-Parodi. "Feeling anxious: anticipatory amygdalo-insular response predicts the feeling of anxious anticipation." Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience 6, no. 1 (2010): 74–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/scan/nsq017.

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Vicens, Leigh. "For all the Blessings of this Life." Journal of Analytic Theology 10 (October 21, 2022): 54–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.12978/jat.2022-10.110407210818.

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I argue, first, against the idea that Christian thanksgiving is about counting one’s blessings, or finding something specific in every circumstance which is intended by God for one’s own good. For we cannot know how God specifically intended to benefit us in most circumstances, and such knowledge is required for blessings-counting; and the New Testament models a different kind of thanksgiving which makes more sense in light of Christian theology. I also argue against the conception of Christian gratitude as a positive (pleasant-feeling) emotion, given the fallen nature of the world; instead, i
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Noviana, Ulva. "HUBUNGAN PERAN ORANG TUA DALAM ANTICIPATORY GUIDANCE SIBLING RIVALRY DAN KECERDASAN EMOSIONAL DENGAN KEJADIAN SIBLING RIVALRY PADA ANAK USIA PRASEKOLAH." NURSING UPDATE : Jurnal Ilmiah Ilmu Keperawatan P-ISSN : 2085-5931 e-ISSN : 2623-2871 1, no. 2 (2019): 32–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.36089/nu.v1i2.62.

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Sibling rivalry is the natural jealousy or dislike feeling of a children to a new child in the family. Preliminary study result obtained 6 (60%) children have sibling rivalry. The purpose of the study was to analyze the relationship of parent role in anticipatory guidance sibling rivalry and emotional intelligence with sibling rivalry incident in preschooler.
 The design of this research is correlational analytic with cross sectional approach. The independent variable is the parent role in the anticipatory guidance sibling rivalry and emotional intelligence, while the dependent variable i
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Drenovsky, Cynthia K. "Anger and the Desire for Retribution among Bereaved Parents." OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying 29, no. 4 (1994): 303–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/ht0e-hche-jflp-xg7f.

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The process of adapting to the death of one's child includes behaviors and emotions that are powerful and frequently misunderstood by nonprofessionals. Anger and the assignment of blame are natural and typical responses to any death, but they are often considered socially unacceptable responses as well. This study examines the determinants of bereaved parents' feelings of anger toward their deceased child and the desire to punish someone for the death of the child. The impact of parents' anger and retribution on depression is also explored. Logit results based oh seventy-eight bereaved parents
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G. Castro, Edgar Allan. "EMPLOYABILITY, CAREER ADAPTABILITY, AND FUTUREORIENTED EMOTIONAL RESPONSES TO WORK TRANSITION OF COLLEGE GRADUATING STUDENTS OF A PHILIPPINE HEI: POST COVID-19 STUDY." Malaysian Online Journal of Educational Management 12, no. 3 (2024): 54–72. https://doi.org/10.22452/mojem.vol12no3.4.

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This study explored the importance of Higher Education Institutions (HEI) by working closely with career counseling and guidance teams to develop programs that build students' confidence and resilience to mitigate anxiety and stress while preparing for their transition to the labor market in the post-COVID-19 economy. This study examined the effect of graduating student-level characteristics (GSLC), specifically employability skills and career adaptability behaviors, on the anticipatory emotions of college students transitioning from school to work. Data were collected through an online survey
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Fleming, Julius B. "Anticipating Blackness." South Atlantic Quarterly 121, no. 1 (2022): 131–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00382876-9561587.

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This essay examines the significance of time to the production of black ontology and thus to the field of black studies. It takes as its point of departure the field-changing call to think more critically about the enduring legacies of chattel slavery, particularly how this imperative has cultivated an anticipatory logic that helps to forecast the conditions of blackness and to analyze the nature of black ontology. It argues that alongside the large-scale, transhistorical modes of structural analysis that characterize this approach, attention to the more local, everyday experiences of black pe
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Bering, Jesse M., Emma R. Curtin, and Jonathan Jong. "Knowledge of Deaths in Hotel Rooms Diminishes Perceived Value and Elicits Guest Aversion." OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying 79, no. 3 (2017): 286–312. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0030222817709694.

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Guest deaths are an inevitable aspect of the hospitality industry. In Study 1, participants read a vignette in which the previous guest died of natural causes, suicide, or homicide. Those who learned of a death (a) saw the room as less valuable, (b) opted to stay in a more basic room in which no death occurred, despite both rooms being offered for free, and (c) anticipated feeling uneasy when imagining an overnight stay. In Study 2, we investigated the persistence of this bias. Perceived room value and anticipatory well-being can be expected to return to baseline levels only many years after t
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Cartin, Andrea, Sonia Ocampo, Adriana Méndez, et al. "Evaluation of family perceptions of palliative medicine department family meetings: Before, during, and after." Journal of Clinical Oncology 35, no. 31_suppl (2017): 156. http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/jco.2017.35.31_suppl.156.

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156 Background: A Palliative Medicine Department (PMD) began in March of 2011 at a national hospital in Costa Rica. Treatment has focused on patient care, and attending the needs of the patients’ family; therefore, an integral approach to the family unit has been performed by a program of Family Meetings(FM). The program has allowed the families of Hematooncological disease patients to be involved in advanced care planning, and defining primary goals of treatment, while receiving information and psychological support. This study reports the families´ perception of the PMD FM before and after t
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GOLLIER, Christian, and Alexander MUERMANN. "Optimal choice and beliefs with ex ante savoring and ex post disappointment." Management science 56, no. 8 (2010): 1272–84. https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.1100.1185.

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We propose a new decision criterion under risk in which people extract both utility from anticipatory feelings ex ante and disutility from disappointment ex post. The decision maker chooses his degree of optimism, given that more optimism raises both the utility of ex ante feelings and the risk of disappointment ex post. We characterize the optimal beliefs and the preferences under risk generated by this mental process and apply this criterion to a simple portfolio choice/insurance problem. We show that these preferences are compatible with first-degree and second-degree stochastic dominance,
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Fox, Aimee, Christine Fruhauf, and Julia Sharp. "FAMILY CAREGIVERS’ REFLECTIONS ON FAMILY SUPPORT AND PREPAREDNESS FOR END-OF-LIFE CAREGIVING." Innovation in Aging 7, Supplement_1 (2023): 415–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igad104.1373.

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Abstract Family caregivers often report not having the knowledge or skills to provide care needed at their care receiver’s end of life (EoL), leaving them vulnerable to emotional, psychological, physical, and financial stress. These stressors may be due to increasingly complex caregiving responsibilities, difficult medical decisions, and anticipatory grief. Studies have also found a higher incidence of adverse effects among dementia caregivers. Few studies have examined how family support is associated with preparedness for EoL caregiving. Thus, the purpose of this study was to explore family
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Anticipatory feeling"

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Karehnke, Paul. "Portfolio choice and asset pricing with endogenous beliefs and skewness preference." Thesis, Paris 9, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014PA090050.

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Cette thèse étudie le choix de portefeuille et l'évaluation d'actifs avec des préférences qui vont au-Delà des préférences d'espérance d'utilité et de moyenne-Variance standard. La première partie de cette thèse porte sur un modèle de décision dans lequel le décideur forme des croyances endogènes compte tenu de son utilité d'anticipation et de sa déception à posteriori. Les implications du modèle en termes de choix de portefeuille et d'évaluation d'actifs sont dérivées et comparées aux implications du modèle d'espérance d'utilité standard. La deuxième partie de cette thèse porte sur des invest
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Books on the topic "Anticipatory feeling"

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Waller, Gary. Late Shakespeare and the English Baroque. Amsterdam University Press, 2024. https://doi.org/10.5117/9789048563180.

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Late Shakespeare and the English Baroque focuses mainly on Shakespeare’s late (or later) works, those written from around 1607. It sets both poetry and plays within the emerging culture of the baroque, the term defined not merely by stylistic features but by the underlying ideological ‘structure of feeling’ of baroque culture in early modern England. The book extends the mode of analysis of The Female Baroque (Amsterdam University Press, 2020) and draws on theoretical work by José Antonio Maravall, Raymond Williams, and Julia Kristeva. It analyzes recurring Baroque characteristics – hyperbole
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Stuart, Susan A. J. Feeling Our Way. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190210465.003.0003.

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Every action, touch, utterance, and look, every listening, taste, smell, and feel is a living question. But it is no ordinary propositional one-by-one question, rather it is a plenisentient sensing and probing non-propositional enquiry about how our world is and how we anticipate its becoming. Using the notion of enkinaesthesia, this paper explores the ways in which an agent’s affectively saturated coengagement with its world establishes patterns of co-articulation of meaning within the anticipatory affective dynamics and the experiential entanglement necessary for expedient action and adaptat
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Book chapters on the topic "Anticipatory feeling"

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Pleeging, Emma, and Martijn Burger. "Hope in Economics." In Historical and Multidisciplinary Perspectives on Hope. Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-46489-9_9.

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Abstract As a topic of research in economics, hope has not been very prevalent. Following the neo-classical paradigm, economists have tended to focus on rationality, self-interest, and universals. A normative and subjective experience such as hope was not believed to fit well with this perspective. However, the development of several heterodox economic approaches over the past decades, such as behavioral economics, has led to renewed attention being given to emotion, subjectivity, and normativity. Economic research on concepts related to hope, such as anticipatory feelings, (consumer) confiden
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Valpey, Kenneth R. "Animals, Personhood, Wonder, and Bhakti-Yoga." In The Palgrave Macmillan Animal Ethics Series. Springer Nature Switzerland, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-93361-5_8.

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Abstract This chapter focuses on selected passages in the Bhāgavata Purāṇa, complementing the previous chapter’s focus on the nature of divinity as it relates to ways of approaching animal ethics. Here the attention is on the process of bhakti-yoga as “fashioning a devotional body” from an ascribed, to an inscribed, to a re-membered body (Holdrege Bhakti and Embodiment: Fashioning Divine Bodies and Devotional Bodies in Kṛṣṇa Bhakti. London: Routledge, 2015) relating with the divine body constituted of saccidānanda—atemporality, consciousness, and bliss. The Bhāgavata Purāṇa offers visions of d
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MacLeod, Andrew. "Anticipatory feelings." In Prospection, well-being, and mental health. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med:psych/9780198725046.003.0005.

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Emotional states do not simply arise in response to events that have happened, but can arise when we think about what might happen in the future. These anticipatory affective states are mediated by distinct neural systems different from those involved in emotional responses to events as they occur. Hope and fear are the typical anticipatory feelings that arise in response to possibilities of future positive and negative events, respectively. Anticipatory feeling states are often quite subtle and elusive, but Chapter 5 reviews some of the attempts to measure these kinds of feeling states. The c
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"Nausea and vomiting." In Oxford Handbook of Cancer Nursing, edited by Mike Tadman and Dave Roberts. Oxford University Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198569244.003.0045.

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Treatment-related nausea and vomiting 546 Anticipatory nausea and vomiting (ANV) 552 Nausea and vomiting in advanced cancer 554 Nausea is an unpleasant feeling of the need to vomit, often accompanied by autonomic sensations. Vomiting is the forceful expulsion of gastric contents through the mouth. Nausea is generally the most distressing long-term symptom of the two, but it is often under-assessed....
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Treur Jan. "Physiological Model-Based Decision Making on Distribution of Effort over Time." In Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence and Applications. IOS Press, 2011. https://doi.org/10.3233/978-1-60750-959-2-400.

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This paper focuses on a human-like agent model that describes how in high load tasks physiological effort relate to exhaustion and feeling fatigue, and this is used as a form of monitoring the agent's remaining resources. More specifically, it is addressed how based on such an agent model anticipatory model-based decision making can take place in order to obtain an appropriate distribution of effort over time.
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Greenspan, P. S. "Moral Residues." In Practical Guilt. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195087628.003.0005.

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Abstract Guilt came into my argument in part I in two connected roles: in its primary form, following action, in response to a contrary-to-duty obligation to feel some appropriate emotion, and in anticipatory form, in advance of action, as the emotional strut of the motivational force of moral “ought.” I have maintained that the two roles allow the emotion to serve as a kind of substitute for action in cases of dilemma. It is by no means an adequate substitute in moral terms but is enough to answer metaethical worries about the sense in which both of the oughts in conflict can be practical. Th
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"Promoting Healthy Sexuality for Children and Adolescents With Disabilities." In Equitable and Inclusive Care in Pediatrics: A Compendium of AAP Clinical Practice Guidelines and Policies. American Academy of Pediatrics, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1542/9781610027489-part05-02.

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This clinical report updates a 2006 report from the American Academy of Pediatrics titled “Sexuality of Children and Adolescents With Developmental Disabilities.” The development of a healthy sexuality best occurs through appropriate education, absence of coercion and violence, and developmental acquisition of skills to navigate feelings, desires, relationships, and social pressures. Pediatric health care providers are important resources for anticipatory guidance and education for all children and youth as they understand their changing bodies, feelings, and behaviors. Yet, youth with disabil
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Brett, Bethany Morgan. "The loss of parents in later life." In The Child-Parent Caregiving Relationship in Later Life. Policy Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447319290.003.0007.

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This chapter focuses on the loss of parents in later life, whether physical or psychological, but with particular focus on the lead-up to death following a period of care. The focus here is not on the period of grief after a death and practicalities of funeral arrangements, but instead emphasis is placed upon the feelings surrounding what Dupuis (2002) called anticipatory or ambiguous loss, which is a sense of loss felt when the death of a loved one is imminent. This chapter looks at the ambivalent feelings that are aroused by the death of parents, including feelings of grief, sadness, depress
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Schunk, Dale H. "Cognitions and Emotions Energize and Sustain Motivation." In Motivation Science. Oxford University PressNew York, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197662359.003.0037.

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Abstract Motivational processes (e.g., cognitions, emotions) energize, direct, and sustain behavior. Some important cognitive processes are self-efficacy, values, interests, goals and evaluations of goal progress, and social comparisons with others. Emotions also enter in, both positive and negative. When motivated to pursue a goal people may feel anticipatory excitement or joy, and they may experience satisfaction when they attain a goal. Conversely, people may experience fear or boredom. But not all cognitions or emotions are motivational. To be motivational, cognitions and emotions must ene
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Panksepp, Jaak. "Seeking Systems and Anticipatory States of the Nervous System." In Affective Neuroscience. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195096736.003.0008.

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Abstract The desires and aspirations of the human heart are endless. It is foolish to attribute them all to a single brain system. But they all come to a standstill if certain brain systems, such as the dopamine (DA) circuits arising from midbrain nuclei, are destroyed. Such was the tragedy that overtook Leonard L. in his childhood, and it was not until he was a grown man that he was able to partake again of worldly delights. What allowed him to achieve the feelings of success described by Sacks was L-DOPA, the precursor of DA. This medicine had already alleviated the psychomotor problems of o
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