戻る
「早戻しボタン」を押すと検索画面に戻ります。 [閉じる]

コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)

通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 e feeling, but to behave as if they had this feeling.
2 nformation about other people's thoughts and feelings.
3 l bodily sensations and pro-social, empathic feelings.
4 ersal, such as the "hedonic flip" of painful feelings.
5 ons and infer their intentions, thoughts and feelings.
6 or creating "sentiment" as a new category of feelings.
7 cerebral networks generate subjective memory feelings.
8 y traits, and predict on-line, self-reported feelings.
9 al biases, interpretations, and experiential feelings.
10 rom a current task to unrelated thoughts and feelings.
11 hanges, we are given information about their feelings.
12 in turn feeds back to influence thoughts and feelings.
13 gital traces that reflect their thoughts and feelings.
14 y life events are aggregated into subjective feelings.
15  structures mainly underpin face familiarity feelings.
16 ies with emotional experience and subjective feelings [10, 12, 13].
17 ther seeing a movie, listening to a song, or feeling a breeze on the skin, we coherently experience t
18 f cue may be affected by contact forces when feeling a surface and we ask whether, on a given trial,
19 e showed significant improvements over time: feelings about functioning mean annual change 3.0 units
20 e ([CP-QoL] social wellbeing and acceptance, feelings about functioning, participation and physical h
21 climate conversations in shaping beliefs and feelings about global warming.
22  care provider with depressed mood, negative feelings about herself, poor sleep, low appetite, poor c
23 der identity is a collection of thoughts and feelings about one's own gender, which may or may not co
24 and inconsistency and complexity of personal feelings about organ donation versus professional activi
25 ristics of dysregulation, including negative feelings about patients, an inappropriately narrow focus
26 d families need opportunities to voice their feelings about their experience in the ICU and to give m
27            More than 90% of parents reported feeling adequately informed to consent to diagnostic gen
28  extremely unpleasant physical and emotional feelings after drug use is terminated.
29 echanism for the intensification of aversive feelings after withdrawal that involves the glutamatergi
30 in the ICU but also frequently elicit strong feelings among health professionals.
31 uditory Pinocchio" effect, with participants feeling and estimating their finger to be longer after t
32 cal state of the body influence motivational feelings and action decisions.
33 osteroid (TCS) phobia refers to the negative feelings and beliefs related to TCSs experienced by pati
34 ' experiences can strongly influence our own feelings and decisions.
35 h participants could share and discuss their feelings and did not provide any direct suggestions for
36  eating behavior as well as decreased hunger feelings and diminished incentive value of food.
37 n this association between subjective hunger feelings and gastrointestinal motility during the MMC is
38                               Generating new feelings and meanings must be contrasted with activating
39 les sources for familiarity and recollection feelings and the fact that expectations determine how on
40 llowing controlled intervention on conscious feelings and their downstream effects on higher-order co
41 iculty in identifying and distinguishing the feelings and thoughts of another from a self-perspective
42 tures of care consistently mediated negative feelings and were linked to more positive experiences we
43 presentation or experience of these changes (feeling) and ( d) categorizing and labeling these change
44 luded chronic pain, recurrence, foreign body feeling, and quality of life scores.
45 re: people must anticipate others' thoughts, feelings, and actions to interact with them successfully
46 control refers to the alignment of thoughts, feelings, and actions with enduringly valued goals in th
47          People's reports of their thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are used in many fields of biome
48 from three types of information: base rates, feelings, and consistency with information retrieved fro
49  of intentional agents, such as thoughts and feelings, and of inanimate objects, such as mass and mat
50                                      Are you feeling anxious?
51  between 3.2 and 9.1 mm, without the patient feeling any pain.
52 ness, or what are typically called emotional feelings, are traditionally viewed as being innately pro
53 vealed differential effects in self-reported feelings as well as in cardiovascular parameters as a fu
54 interoception (i.e., the sensing of visceral feelings), as observed in patients with cardiodynamic de
55                             Furthermore, the feelings associated with music were found to occupy cont
56 tion towards internally-directed thoughts or feelings at the expense of staying focused on the road.
57 but common sense and philosophy suggest that feeling beauty differs from sensuous pleasures such as e
58 claim that only the pleasure associated with feeling beauty requires thought and disprove his claim t
59 6 of 17 storytelling subjects (94%) reported feeling "better" or "much better," and none felt "much w
60 rganisms do not need to hope as a subjective feeling, but to behave as if they had this feeling.
61         It remains unclear whether these two feelings can be accurately and differentially predicted
62 CI, 71%-81%]; LR, 0.09 [95% CI, 0.02-0.38]), feeling cold (n = 412; sensitivity, 2% [95% CI, 0%-5%];
63 d 3 (2.8%) discontinued scalp cooling due to feeling cold.
64 r informed, improved disease management, and feeling confident in the relationship with physicians.
65 tending physicians (95%; p < 0.001) reported feeling confident leading in-hospital cardiac arrest tea
66 ts' individual symptom trajectories, such as feeling depressed, social, and calm and hearing voices.
67 -physical violence was positively related to feeling disappointed with one's occupation, which was in
68 losed when imagining someone yawning, or not feeling distressed while observing other individuals per
69 MDD patients, who showed more instability in feeling down and irritated, had less connections between
70 mptoms, such as sore/aching eye (p = 0.003), feeling dry (p = 0.005) and blurred vision (p = 0.02) ar
71 8 music samples and reported on the specific feelings (e.g., "angry," "dreamy") or broad affective fe
72 diction by asking participants to reflect on feelings elicited by viewing aversive images (Study 1) a
73                                      Are you feeling emotionally fragile, moody, unpredictable, even
74             He enrolls with enthusiasm, and, feeling empowered, creates a profile on PatientsLikeMe t
75  physiological quiescence, and less negative feelings even during social exclusion.
76                    What is the nature of the feelings evoked by music?
77 licy initiatives yet users frequently report feeling excluded from the care planning process.
78 Further, these subjects reported sharing the feelings expressed in the stimulus to a greater degree,
79 ted symptoms (eg, tiredness, breathlessness, feeling faint, dizziness, and restless legs, especially
80 of prophylactic paracetamol, including pain, feeling feverish, chills, muscle ache, headache, and mal
81 se previously reported (injection-site pain, feeling feverish, muscle ache, headache), but were less
82 ed in various biochemistry labs to acquire a feeling for the different areas of investigation.
83 ipants chose the target card while reporting feeling free and in control of their choice.
84 od [0.5% (0.2-0.7) per meal/wk], eating when feeling full [2.9% (1.2-4.5)], eating continuously [1.6%
85 weekly self-weighing, continuing to eat when feeling full more than once a week, and eating continuou
86 y started to self-weigh, stopped eating when feeling full, and stopped eating continuously during the
87                                     Although feeling generally well, he reported having had progressi
88  people are motivated to reduce the aversive feelings generated by uncertainty.
89  overgeneralized self-blaming emotions (eg, "feeling guilty for everything"), known to have a key rol
90 symptom level, fatigue or loss of energy and feeling guilty had the largest difference in importance
91 he kinesthetic signal from the moving to the feeling hand, rather than assuming the displacement of a
92 interactions with professionals in the stage feeling helpful or feeling unhelpful.
93 g confidential and sensitive information and feeling hesitant in changing their handover methods.
94           Secondary outcomes were ratings of feeling "high," drug "liking," and negative drug effects
95 sion has a marked effect on our thoughts and feelings; however, such effects can be tempered by broad
96             People following stroke reported feeling ill-prepared to self-manage.
97  (cortisol and testosterone), psychological (feeling in control), and behavioral (competence, dominan
98  take from the many comments is a prevailing feeling in the research community that we need significa
99 ogress in decoding the neural nature of such feelings in animal brains.
100 on a need to reduce uncertainty and negative feelings in combination with a relatively high level of
101                                  Do negative feelings in general trigger addictive behavior, or do sp
102 ntrast, the neural constitution of emotional feelings in humans has resisted systematic scientific an
103 two cultures" conveyed women's experience of feeling "in between" cultures and described refugee wome
104 mproved decision-making processes defined as feeling informed, defining clear values related to the d
105                                Putting one's feelings into words (also called affect labeling) can at
106 ply "appearing" in operating rooms, or staff feeling it had been imposed.
107 fied, compared with those who do not, report feeling less negative emotion after watching videos depi
108 ooling, 27.3% (95% CI, 18.0%-36.6%) reported feeling less physically attractive compared with 56.3% (
109 zed, exposure to poverty was associated with feeling less safe at school and, in turn, with an increa
110 the experience of poverty is associated with feeling less safe at school, and 2) feeling less safe is
111 ted with feeling less safe at school, and 2) feeling less safe is associated with engaging in poorer
112  and wellbeing at wave 3 (life satisfaction, feeling life is worthwhile, happiness, and anxiety, rate
113 se I have spent much of my scientific career feeling like an imposter-one with the wrong sort of back
114                     Second, people interpret feelings, like ease of processing, as evidence of truth.
115 ed sedation, stimulation, or pleasure (i.e., feeling, liking).
116 ompanied by altered thinking (cognition) and feeling (mood), functions that depend on information pro
117 n to regulate physiological stress) predicts feeling more stressed, whereas connectivity with regions
118    Nurse practitioners or those who reported feeling 'more prepared' for the role were more likely to
119 ng meaning-making art that elicits interest, feeling moved, and mixed emotions.
120 who undergo the procedure report their knees feeling "normal" post-operation, and complications can a
121  with a single index finger and by passively feeling objects that moved relative to a restrained fing
122  to discriminate curved surfaces by actively feeling objects with a single index finger and by passiv
123                                            A feeling of a foreign object and quality of life were sim
124 easure amplitude increases linearly with the feeling of beauty.
125       Decisions are usually accompanied by a feeling of being wrong or right - a subjective confidenc
126 g "ecstasy," is well known for stimulating a feeling of closeness and empathy in its users.
127  to perform self-management support, general feeling of competency on internship, belief on patients'
128 y, it remains unclear whether the subjective feeling of confidence is related to the objective, stati
129       Accordingly, we suggest that the human feeling of confidence originates from a mental computati
130 eption is invariably accompanied by a graded feeling of confidence that guides metacognitive awarenes
131 evaluated the socio-motor competence and the feeling of connectedness between participants and their
132                                 This greater feeling of connectedness was positively correlated with
133                Sense of agency refers to the feeling of control over one's actions, and their consequ
134 surgery causes an increase in the subjective feeling of dry eye as well as an increase of signs of dr
135                               The subjective feeling of dry mouth increased (P = 0.001).
136  by testosterone, possibly through increased feeling of entitlement.
137 scribed a runner's high as a sudden pleasant feeling of euphoria, anxiolysis, sedation, and analgesia
138 ur ability to remember ranges from the vague feeling of familiarity to vivid recollection of associat
139 nce of the color of an apple to a full-blown feeling of fear or other emotions.
140 erstar lecturer could create such a positive feeling of learning that students would choose those lec
141                                 Perhaps, the feeling of loss of pain was only a perception.
142                   Here we show that the mere feeling of lower socioeconomic status relative to others
143                           We are used to the feeling of making a diagnosis, to reassuring our patient
144 nd into 2019, we demonstrate that a visceral feeling of oneness (that is, psychological fusion) with
145 cial activation of this pathway (without any feeling of pain) after the sampling of a taste can also
146 logical mechanisms, temporal discounting and feeling of resource scarcity, for explaining the relatio
147 ntestinal tissue and potentially providing a feeling of satiety.
148 t 3 symptoms: pain, visual sensations, and a feeling of seeing through the removed eye.
149 le (VAS) score, which quantifies the overall feeling of sickness at altitude (VAS[O]; various thresho
150      The visual analog scale for the overall feeling of sickness at altitude, Acute Mountain Sickness
151              Participants reported a reduced feeling of social exclusion after Psi vs. Pla administra
152                                 Although the feeling of stress is ubiquitous, the neural mechanisms u
153 orks can specifically predict the subjective feeling of stress.
154 ntify hippocampal networks that modulate the feeling of stress.
155                     Six themes emerged: 1) a feeling of support, 2) humanization of the medical syste
156 ainly, it humanizes the medical institution (feeling of support, confirmation of the role played by t
157  the offer (offender-focused block, OB), the feeling of the victim receiving this offer (victim-focus
158 ly, the dominance of global percepts and the feeling of visual richness reported independently of the
159  that not only does it reflect the intuitive feeling of what is "complex" and what is "simple" but al
160 onditions, increased integration may lead to feelings of "sensory overload" in children with autism.
161 e game reduced feelings of warmth, increased feelings of anger, and increased blood pressure and left
162  post-traumatic stress, depression symptoms, feelings of anger, social interactions with other ethnic
163 ulation reporting NSSH to relieve unpleasant feelings of anger, tension, anxiety, or depression incre
164 cholecystokinin and insulin), and subjective feelings of appetite were measured at baseline, week 9 i
165 her appetite-related hormones, or subjective feelings of appetite, seen with WL, regardless of the ke
166 ther appetite-related hormones or subjective feelings of appetite.
167                  Critically, it also reduced feelings of apprehensiveness about the feared scenario,
168                                   It impacts feelings of belonging and connection to services and soc
169 arding improving attitudes, satisfaction and feelings of caring efficacy, in provision of care to peo
170 ction in caring for people with dementia and feelings of caring efficacy.
171  these results point to the possibility that feelings of chronic social disconnection may be mirrored
172                                       Higher feelings of competence and autonomy, and timely achievem
173 ciprocal decisions is explained, in part, by feelings of conflict - reciprocal decisions are less con
174 ing in their synchronization partner greater feelings of connectedness towards patients.
175  underlies patients' social interactions and feelings of contact with others.
176   What leads healthy individuals to abnormal feelings of contact with schizophrenia patients remains
177 ty on interview performance was explained by feelings of control and testosterone reactivity.
178                                      Greater feelings of control predicted enhanced interview perform
179 o self-rate their health, happiness, stress, feelings of control, and whether they felt relaxed.
180  during the COVID-19 lockdown and expressing feelings of depression and health anxiety.
181 appetite may also be sensitive to subjective feelings of deprivation for critical nonfood resources (
182 f face-work and mutual pretence to alleviate feelings of discomfort when engaged in aspects of care a
183 emic inflammation causes malaise and general feelings of discomfort.
184 ls of anxiety, increased agitation, and more feelings of disembodiment and amnesia.
185                                              Feelings of drowsiness typically manifested immediately
186 amine (MDMA) reportedly produces distinctive feelings of empathy and closeness with others.
187 reationally, reportedly because it increases feelings of empathy, sociability, and interpersonal clos
188 inated energy drinks in enhancing subjective feelings of energy (s-energy) is controversial.
189 rom the circuits that give rise to conscious feelings of fear and anxiety.
190 suggest that signals from the body - the gut feelings of financial lore - contribute to success in th
191                                              Feelings of frustration, powerlessness and guilt were co
192 otic intake resulted in significantly higher feelings of fullness (P = 0.04) and lower prospective fo
193 ved benefits from their experiences, such as feelings of gratitude or family cohesion.
194 othesized that the WM structures involved in feelings of guilt are associated with social and moral c
195                             Respondents with feelings of guilt doubted more about direct contact.
196  anisotropy, and mean diffusivity [MD]), and feelings of guilt in 1196 healthy, young students using
197 g (or life satisfaction), hedonic wellbeing (feelings of happiness, sadness, anger, stress, and pain)
198 wed surrogates to regain control, counteract feelings of helplessness, and end their empathic sufferi
199 d fiber, an HGI postexercise meal suppresses feelings of hunger and augments postprandial fullness se
200 umami and a combination of tastants inhibits feelings of hunger, but only the latter also reduces foo
201 d significant correlation between subjective feelings of improvisational performance and modulation i
202 time with them served to reinforce patients' feelings of insignificance and powerlessness, reflecting
203              A hot flush is characterised by feelings of intense heat, profuse elevations in cutaneou
204 ip functioning; by fostering equanimity with feelings of loneliness and social disconnect, acceptance
205 bioeffects such as vertigo, dizziness, false feelings of motion, nausea, nystagmus, magnetophosphenes
206 low, affective touch may reduce the negative feelings of ostracism induced by the social exclusion ma
207 al obligations and callous unconcern for the feelings of others.
208 ry full-body illusions were used to modulate feelings of ownership over a mannequin body that was vie
209 through value-added taxes and strong popular feelings of ownership over all revenues may minimize dif
210 in body viewed in the mirror elicited strong feelings of ownership over the mannequin and increased p
211 alised C tactile modality that gives rise to feelings of pleasant, affective touch, can enhance the e
212                                   Subjective feelings of power resulted more from within-participant
213              Positional power and subjective feelings of power were strongly related but had unique r
214 pt is necessary to capture the complex mixed feelings of proud superiority when "looking down upon" a
215 econd time delay or did not mimic, and rated feelings of rapport and trust toward the avatars.
216 ospitalization was associated with increased feelings of regret about choosing prolonged mechanical v
217 of social connection) or threat (anticipated feelings of rejection).
218 res of youths' (age, 13 years) self-reported feelings of safety, screen time, physical activity, and
219 nd gastric emptying as well as self-reported feelings of satiation is present.
220              Patients reported more positive feelings of self-esteem and an average health status.
221 f time since transplantation and resulted in feelings of shock, grief, loss, anger, guilt and depress
222 ocybin may have positive effects on mood and feelings of social connectedness.
223  expectancies for social reward (anticipated feelings of social connection) or threat (anticipated fe
224 actor-alpha (TNF-alpha), depressed mood, and feelings of social disconnection were assessed hourly.
225 kines (TNF-alpha, IL-6), depressed mood, and feelings of social disconnection.
226 allenge show increases in depressed mood and feelings of social disconnection.
227 owed greater increases in depressed mood and feelings of social disconnection.
228 ether slow, affective touch, can also reduce feelings of social exclusion, a form of social pain.
229 neutral, touch led to a specific decrease in feelings of social exclusion, beyond general mood effect
230 uently, ostracism may induce strong negative feelings of social exclusion.
231 ively associated with neighborhood trust and feelings of social integration.
232  emotional reaction that is characterized by feelings of stress and anxiety in situations involving m
233 x frequency ratios, on the other hand, evoke feelings of tension or "dissonance".
234 s sense of agency, the consequences included feelings of uncertainty, isolation, and dislocation.
235 iblings, managing self-care, and coping with feelings of uncertainty.
236 ion of a novel environment as well as higher feelings of virtual immersion compromised memory perform
237                     Fear of the speculum and feelings of vulnerability during the gynecologic exams a
238 mfort zone.' Emotional upset, self-blame and feelings of vulnerability to investigative procedures we
239 designed to elicit negative emotions such as feelings of vulnerability, loss of control, apprehension
240              Furthermore, naltrexone reduced feelings of warmth and increased vasoconstriction during
241     Social exclusion during the game reduced feelings of warmth, increased feelings of anger, and inc
242  word of each pair when shown the first) and feeling-of-knowing judgments prior to recognition tests
243 We also assessed asked patients' about their feelings on discussing their weight when they have visit
244               No differences in foreign body feeling or quality of life scores were detected.
245      Users of social media often share their feelings or emotional states through their posts.
246 ossible mechanisms underlying limitations in feeling others' pain, and present new, more specific, br
247  severe, unexpected episodes contributing to feeling 'out of a comfort zone.' Emotional upset, self-b
248                           Most people report feeling persistently 'time poor'-like they have too many
249 ed by intermediaries led to individual staff feeling personally supported.
250 r of becoming infected and infecting others, feeling powerless to handle patients' conditions, and ma
251  as measured with the self-reported Mood and Feelings Questionnaire (MFQ).
252 mptoms were measured with the Short Mood and Feelings Questionnaire (SMFQ) at age 13 years in the GUI
253 mptoms were assessed with the short Mood and Feelings Questionnaire (sMFQ) at seven timepoints betwee
254  self-reported depressive symptoms (Mood and Feelings Questionnaire [MFQ]) at each timepoint.
255 on, allowing clinicians to engage with their feelings, rather than feel ashamed of them and hiding di
256 ed to write about their deepest thoughts and feelings regarding their cancer (EW) or about neutral to
257                     Processing of subjective feelings regardless of skill may contribute to neural mo
258                The neural correlates of this feeling remain controversial however, as experimental ma
259 of factors promoting patients' perception of feeling safe during an intensive care admission.
260  of the modified technique with the majority feeling safer and confirming conservation of PPE.
261 thy, young students using MRI and the Guilty Feeling Scale, which comprises interpersonal situation (
262 ales scores of breathlessness, perception of feeling secure, and improvement of respiratory function
263 eclinical models if we take animal emotional feelings seriously, as opposed to just behavioral change
264                                Among adults, feeling sick (15.9%, 95% CI 13.0%-18.8%) was a more comm
265 tness, consistently judged another's skin as feeling softer and smoother than their own skin.
266 e marker was associated with a mixed-valence feeling state, whereas the empathic distress marker was
267 anges in the brain and body and 2) conscious feeling states reflected in self-reports of fear and anx
268                                     Specific feelings such as "triumphant" were better preserved acro
269 esentation, it is worth also delineating how feelings, such as fluency and emotion, influence mental
270 tigated whether men who self-report bisexual feelings tend to produce bisexual arousal patterns.
271 s of normality and perceived independence', 'feeling terrified' and 'fluctuating emotions' illustrate
272 nificantly higher levels of social exclusion feelings than nonanxious controls.
273  action usually induces a sense of agency, a feeling that arises when an expected outcome matches the
274                                          The feeling that life is filled with worthwhile activities m
275                     Sense of agency (SoA), a feeling that one's voluntary actions produce events in t
276 re, we investigate the wider implications of feeling that the things one does in life are worthwhile
277 pace of a VR scenario such that they had the feeling that they could just touch them with their left/
278 d child in the way they wanted (P = .00) and feeling that they had received practical support from he
279 mple, tip-of-the-tongue states are conscious feelings that arise when recall fails.
280 ence has shown that social pain--the painful feelings that follow from social rejection, exclusion, o
281                    The observer reported the feelings that the stimulus evoked.
282 s are not directly responsible for conscious feelings, they provide nonconscious inputs that coalesce
283 nduced phase III contractions induced hunger feelings through a cholinergic pathway.
284  behavioral pathways that allow for positive feelings to get under the skin and influence physical we
285 g computers to patients at visits), patients feeling "too ill" in 8 (16.7%), patient refusal in 8 (16
286 ue, and ratings of cocaine "liking" (hedonic feelings toward cocaine) and "wanting" (craving for coca
287  social behaviors, anthropomorphism, uncanny feelings toward robots, and the formation of emotional a
288 end-of-life decision-making process, nurses' feelings toward their patients and physicians' feelings
289 elings toward their patients and physicians' feelings toward their patients' families influence the d
290 experience emotional, romantic and/or sexual feelings towards inanimate objects (e.g. a bridge, a sta
291 rofessionals in the stage feeling helpful or feeling unhelpful.
292 hallenges; Sharing the Experience; Learning; Feeling Unprepared, Responses to Death and Finding Benef
293                                     Although feeling unsafe was associated with screen time, screen t
294 dds ratio, 0.55; 95% CI, 0.45-0.67) of their feelings versus their professional activity, less likely
295  serious problem with therapy; most reported feeling very informed (421 of 483 [87%]) and having high
296 tified associations between characteristics, feeling very welcomed, high (top 25th percentile) self-i
297 while white males were most likely to report feeling very welcomed.
298 ore commonly cited barrier to adherence than feeling well (9.3%, 95% CI 7.2%-11.4%).
299 ms for mothers were being able to talk about feelings within the family (P = .00) and trusting that h
300 Multivariate logistic regression showed that feeling worried about breast cancer (Adjust OR = 0.33, p

 
Page Top