戻る
「早戻しボタン」を押すと検索画面に戻ります。

今後説明を表示しない

[OK]

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 to how the human brain generates emotion and feeling.
2 l bodily sensations and pro-social, empathic feelings.
3 al biases, interpretations, and experiential feelings.
4 rom a current task to unrelated thoughts and feelings.
5 in turn feeds back to influence thoughts and feelings.
6 y life events are aggregated into subjective feelings.
7 y or while simulating a prespecified boxer's feelings.
8 an subjects who are sharing a third person's feelings.
9 ncology community and one greeted with mixed feelings.
10  the previous 3 days) and difficulty sharing feelings.
11 atients are asked to report their noncurrent feelings.
12 ositive emotion when reporting on noncurrent feelings.
13 ersal, such as the "hedonic flip" of painful feelings.
14 ons and infer their intentions, thoughts and feelings.
15 or creating "sentiment" as a new category of feelings.
16 y traits, and predict on-line, self-reported feelings.
17 ies with emotional experience and subjective feelings [10, 12, 13].
18 s (>/= 90%) and providing support for family feelings (90%).
19                                              Feeling a bit cagey: morpholino-based antisense reagents
20 ther seeing a movie, listening to a song, or feeling a breeze on the skin, we coherently experience t
21                                    Are HMAs' feelings about math merely psychological epiphenomena, o
22                                   Subjective feelings about offers correlated with these norm predict
23 and inconsistency and complexity of personal feelings about organ donation versus professional activi
24 ristics of dysregulation, including negative feelings about patients, an inappropriately narrow focus
25 d families need opportunities to voice their feelings about their experience in the ICU and to give m
26 of being afraid, reinvigorating the study of feelings across species.
27  extremely unpleasant physical and emotional feelings after drug use is terminated.
28 in the ICU but also frequently elicit strong feelings among health professionals.
29 tings of indecisiveness and "not just right" feelings among patients with HD and were unattributable
30 uditory Pinocchio" effect, with participants feeling and estimating their finger to be longer after t
31 osteroid (TCS) phobia refers to the negative feelings and beliefs related to TCSs experienced by pati
32              However, adaptive expression of feelings and communication with one's social network can
33 l systems (primes), associated with specific feelings and desires that combine to form the "cocktail"
34 h participants could share and discuss their feelings and did not provide any direct suggestions for
35  observed on both the difficulty identifying feelings and difficulty describing feelings dimensions o
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 ed with stimulus valuation, tracked positive feelings and the value of the best item.
40 iculty in identifying and distinguishing the feelings and thoughts of another from a self-perspective
41 re-specific selves and patterns of thinking, feeling, and acting.
42 behaviors, as well as how people's thinking, feeling, and behaviors give rise to social and built env
43  of the environments, affect one's thinking, feeling, and behaviors, as well as how people's thinking
44 luded chronic pain, recurrence, foreign body feeling, and quality of life scores.
45          People's reports of their thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are used in many fields of biome
46  of intentional agents, such as thoughts and feelings, and of inanimate objects, such as mass and mat
47                                              Feelings are the "common currency" which enable optimal
48 ness, or what are typically called emotional feelings, are traditionally viewed as being innately pro
49 vealed differential effects in self-reported feelings as well as in cardiovascular parameters as a fu
50                Loneliness is the distressing feeling associated with the perceived absence of satisfy
51 tion towards internally-directed thoughts or feelings at the expense of staying focused on the road.
52     Five questions assessed social function: feeling attached to family and friends; thriving at scho
53 but common sense and philosophy suggest that feeling beauty differs from sensuous pleasures such as e
54 claim that only the pleasure associated with feeling beauty requires thought and disprove his claim t
55 6 of 17 storytelling subjects (94%) reported feeling "better" or "much better," and none felt "much w
56 ctions are not causally related to emotional feelings but obviously contribute to these, at least ind
57  of the insular cortex in both awareness and feeling by showing that even in rare instances of comple
58         It remains unclear whether these two feelings can be accurately and differentially predicted
59                                These anxious feelings can paradoxically co-occur with positive feelin
60 d 3 (2.8%) discontinued scalp cooling due to feeling cold.
61 aying, were 54 percent more likely to report feeling confident about repaying, and reported spending
62 r informed, improved disease management, and feeling confident in the relationship with physicians.
63                                    Worrying, feeling depressed, and cognitive problems were grouped i
64 entifying feelings and difficulty describing feelings dimensions of the TAS-20, whereas the externall
65 MDD patients, who showed more instability in feeling down and irritated, had less connections between
66 mptoms, such as sore/aching eye (p = 0.003), feeling dry (p = 0.005) and blurred vision (p = 0.02) ar
67 diction by asking participants to reflect on feelings elicited by viewing aversive images (Study 1) a
68 fully sentient and capable of expressing and feeling emotion.
69  physiological quiescence, and less negative feelings even during social exclusion.
70 tween volunteering and experiencing negative feelings, except for low-income countries.
71 licy initiatives yet users frequently report feeling excluded from the care planning process.
72 erse events (82 of 246 vs 28 of 122 reported feeling faint or dizzy, P = .039).
73 ted symptoms (eg, tiredness, breathlessness, feeling faint, dizziness, and restless legs, especially
74 e normal arm at the elbow and simultaneously feeling for flexion or extension of the contralateral (p
75 ed in various biochemistry labs to acquire a feeling for the different areas of investigation.
76 ent predictors of poor job satisfaction were feeling frustrated by work (ie, a burnout item) (OR: 37)
77 g with injury struggled to be hopeful whilst feeling frustrated with the process of treatment and rec
78 weekly self-weighing, continuing to eat when feeling full more than once a week, and eating continuou
79 y started to self-weigh, stopped eating when feeling full, and stopped eating continuously during the
80                                     Although feeling generally well, he reported having had progressi
81  overgeneralized self-blaming emotions (eg, "feeling guilty for everything"), known to have a key rol
82 symptom level, fatigue or loss of energy and feeling guilty had the largest difference in importance
83 he kinesthetic signal from the moving to the feeling hand, rather than assuming the displacement of a
84 g confidential and sensitive information and feeling hesitant in changing their handover methods.
85 cing more positive subjective effects (i.e., feeling "high") after marijuana administration and those
86  sense of risk is less about fact than about feeling, how do we adjust it?
87 sion has a marked effect on our thoughts and feelings; however, such effects can be tempered by broad
88 -day reduction in duration of cough, in days feeling ill, and in days with impaired activities.
89             People following stroke reported feeling ill-prepared to self-manage.
90  (cortisol and testosterone), psychological (feeling in control), and behavioral (competence, dominan
91  take from the many comments is a prevailing feeling in the research community that we need significa
92 ogress in decoding the neural nature of such feelings in animal brains.
93 on a need to reduce uncertainty and negative feelings in combination with a relatively high level of
94 ntrast, the neural constitution of emotional feelings in humans has resisted systematic scientific an
95 airments may influence reports of noncurrent feelings in schizophrenia.
96 mproved decision-making processes defined as feeling informed, defining clear values related to the d
97  or working out what others are thinking and feeling, is markedly similar to print reading.
98 ply "appearing" in operating rooms, or staff feeling it had been imposed.
99 ooling, 27.3% (95% CI, 18.0%-36.6%) reported feeling less physically attractive compared with 56.3% (
100 zed, exposure to poverty was associated with feeling less safe at school and, in turn, with an increa
101 the experience of poverty is associated with feeling less safe at school, and 2) feeling less safe is
102 ted with feeling less safe at school, and 2) feeling less safe is associated with engaging in poorer
103 e as needs changed (p=0.009), and carers not feeling listened to (p=0.006).
104 re, we explore whether positive and negative feelings mirror each other or if they are separate const
105 mation remains crucial because donors report feeling misinformed about or unprepared for donation.
106    Nurse practitioners or those who reported feeling 'more prepared' for the role were more likely to
107                        Participants reported feeling most positive and most anxious when choosing bet
108 ng meaning-making art that elicits interest, feeling moved, and mixed emotions.
109  with a single index finger and by passively feeling objects that moved relative to a restrained fing
110  to discriminate curved surfaces by actively feeling objects with a single index finger and by passiv
111                                            A feeling of a foreign object and quality of life were sim
112 easure amplitude increases linearly with the feeling of beauty.
113                                          The feeling of being observed or merely participating in an
114 n were commonly associated with a subjective feeling of calmness.
115 g "ecstasy," is well known for stimulating a feeling of closeness and empathy in its users.
116  to perform self-management support, general feeling of competency on internship, belief on patients'
117 retirement plan eases stress and engenders a feeling of confidence about the future.
118 y, it remains unclear whether the subjective feeling of confidence is related to the objective, stati
119       Accordingly, we suggest that the human feeling of confidence originates from a mental computati
120 eption is invariably accompanied by a graded feeling of confidence that guides metacognitive awarenes
121 evaluated the socio-motor competence and the feeling of connectedness between participants and their
122                                 This greater feeling of connectedness was positively correlated with
123                Sense of agency refers to the feeling of control over one's actions, and their consequ
124                               The subjective feeling of dry mouth increased (P = 0.001).
125  by testosterone, possibly through increased feeling of entitlement.
126 scribed a runner's high as a sudden pleasant feeling of euphoria, anxiolysis, sedation, and analgesia
127 uent known (later retrieved accompanied by a feeling of familiarity), subsequent primed (later retrie
128                                 Perhaps, the feeling of loss of pain was only a perception.
129                   Here we show that the mere feeling of lower socioeconomic status relative to others
130 t control over their bladder function, and a feeling of normalisation helped them to maintain the int
131       Most commonly reported symptoms were a feeling of obstructed defecation (8/19, 42%), <3 defecat
132 tex is most tightly linked to the subjective feeling of ownership of the seen limb, whereas remapping
133 onflicts significantly disrupted the default feeling of ownership of the seen real limb, as indexed b
134 logical mechanisms, temporal discounting and feeling of resource scarcity, for explaining the relatio
135 y as an important factor promoting patients' feeling of safety in an intensive care unit.
136 t 3 symptoms: pain, visual sensations, and a feeling of seeing through the removed eye.
137 le (VAS) score, which quantifies the overall feeling of sickness at altitude (VAS[O]; various thresho
138      The visual analog scale for the overall feeling of sickness at altitude, Acute Mountain Sickness
139              Participants reported a reduced feeling of social exclusion after Psi vs. Pla administra
140                     Six themes emerged: 1) a feeling of support, 2) humanization of the medical syste
141 ainly, it humanizes the medical institution (feeling of support, confirmation of the role played by t
142  the offer (offender-focused block, OB), the feeling of the victim receiving this offer (victim-focus
143 ly, the dominance of global percepts and the feeling of visual richness reported independently of the
144 , appetite (P = .009), sleep (P < .001), and feeling of well-being (P < .001), as measured by the ESA
145 onditions, increased integration may lead to feelings of "sensory overload" in children with autism.
146                                              Feelings of anger were higher after V(RED) compared to t
147 e game reduced feelings of warmth, increased feelings of anger, and increased blood pressure and left
148                  Critically, it also reduced feelings of apprehensiveness about the feared scenario,
149 adherence, worry about symptoms and illness, feelings of being different than family and peers, and p
150               113/131 (86%) fathers reported feelings of being grateful.
151 e, particularly in the absence of protective feelings of calm or positive self-view associated with c
152 sitively with actual suicide attempt, while 'feelings of calm' and 'positive feelings towards self' a
153 arding improving attitudes, satisfaction and feelings of caring efficacy, in provision of care to peo
154 ction in caring for people with dementia and feelings of caring efficacy.
155                                       Higher feelings of competence and autonomy, and timely achievem
156 ciprocal decisions is explained, in part, by feelings of conflict - reciprocal decisions are less con
157 ing in their synchronization partner greater feelings of connectedness towards patients.
158  underlies patients' social interactions and feelings of contact with others.
159   What leads healthy individuals to abnormal feelings of contact with schizophrenia patients remains
160 ty on interview performance was explained by feelings of control and testosterone reactivity.
161                                      Greater feelings of control predicted enhanced interview perform
162 o self-rate their health, happiness, stress, feelings of control, and whether they felt relaxed.
163 These individuals do not report experiencing feelings of craving for cocaine, an important distinctio
164 appetite may also be sensitive to subjective feelings of deprivation for critical nonfood resources (
165 f face-work and mutual pretence to alleviate feelings of discomfort when engaged in aspects of care a
166 emic inflammation causes malaise and general feelings of discomfort.
167 ls of anxiety, increased agitation, and more feelings of disembodiment and amnesia.
168                                           As feelings of disgust are thought to be an important psych
169                       But what underlies the feelings of dread effected by math anxiety?
170  the effects of three emotional motivators - feelings of empathy, positive affect, and relational clo
171 reationally, reportedly because it increases feelings of empathy, sociability, and interpersonal clos
172  increased heart rate and blood pressure and feelings of euphoria (eg, 'High' and 'Like Drug').
173 rom the circuits that give rise to conscious feelings of fear and anxiety.
174 suggest that signals from the body - the gut feelings of financial lore - contribute to success in th
175                                              Feelings of frustration, powerlessness and guilt were co
176 otic intake resulted in significantly higher feelings of fullness (P = 0.04) and lower prospective fo
177 owing the error, the professionals described feelings of guilt (53.8%) and shame (42.5%).
178                             Respondents with feelings of guilt doubted more about direct contact.
179 crease subjective experiences of weight, ii) feelings of guilt explain this effect, and iii) whether
180    Studies 2 and 3 indicated that heightened feelings of guilt mediated the effect, whereas other neg
181 g (or life satisfaction), hedonic wellbeing (feelings of happiness, sadness, anger, stress, and pain)
182 wed surrogates to regain control, counteract feelings of helplessness, and end their empathic sufferi
183 d fiber, an HGI postexercise meal suppresses feelings of hunger and augments postprandial fullness se
184 umami and a combination of tastants inhibits feelings of hunger, but only the latter also reduces foo
185              A hot flush is characterised by feelings of intense heat, profuse elevations in cutaneou
186  a wide spectrum of HIV risk perception, and feelings of isolation and anxiety.
187 itive appraisals about mutation testing, and feelings of isolation.
188  Watching someone scratch himself can induce feelings of itchiness in the perceiver.
189 icantly with suicide attempt status; strong 'feelings of love' associated positively with actual suic
190 d not predict suicidal behavior, but intense feelings of love, particularly in the absence of protect
191 low, affective touch may reduce the negative feelings of ostracism induced by the social exclusion ma
192            Empathy--the ability to share the feelings of others--is fundamental to our emotional and
193 al obligations and callous unconcern for the feelings of others.
194 ry full-body illusions were used to modulate feelings of ownership over a mannequin body that was vie
195 in body viewed in the mirror elicited strong feelings of ownership over the mannequin and increased p
196 alised C tactile modality that gives rise to feelings of pleasant, affective touch, can enhance the e
197 eferences was mediated by photograph-induced feelings of positive arousal, but not negative arousal.
198                                   Subjective feelings of power resulted more from within-participant
199              Positional power and subjective feelings of power were strongly related but had unique r
200 pt is necessary to capture the complex mixed feelings of proud superiority when "looking down upon" a
201 econd time delay or did not mimic, and rated feelings of rapport and trust toward the avatars.
202 ospitalization was associated with increased feelings of regret about choosing prolonged mechanical v
203 d alternatives during decision making evokes feelings of regret, whereas higher gains elicit gratific
204                            Patients had more feelings of repletion, flatulence, intestinal murmurs, a
205  questions in the CAAMQ identified patients' feelings of sadness, distress, and the importance of str
206 res of youths' (age, 13 years) self-reported feelings of safety, screen time, physical activity, and
207 nd gastric emptying as well as self-reported feelings of satiation is present.
208              Patients reported more positive feelings of self-esteem and an average health status.
209                  Participants struggled with feelings of shame and believed that others possessed sti
210 f time since transplantation and resulted in feelings of shock, grief, loss, anger, guilt and depress
211  produced small but significant increases in feelings of sociability and enhanced recognition of sad
212            Thus, MDMA increased euphoria and feelings of sociability, perhaps by reducing sensitivity
213 icipants with SHI reported experiencing more feelings of social defeat (U=109, z=-2.09, P=.04) and lo
214 actor-alpha (TNF-alpha), depressed mood, and feelings of social disconnection were assessed hourly.
215 kines (TNF-alpha, IL-6), depressed mood, and feelings of social disconnection.
216 allenge show increases in depressed mood and feelings of social disconnection.
217 owed greater increases in depressed mood and feelings of social disconnection.
218 ether slow, affective touch, can also reduce feelings of social exclusion, a form of social pain.
219 neutral, touch led to a specific decrease in feelings of social exclusion, beyond general mood effect
220 uently, ostracism may induce strong negative feelings of social exclusion.
221  emotional reaction that is characterized by feelings of stress and anxiety in situations involving m
222 nts noted how they believed the reduction in feelings of stress mediated the positive influence of th
223 x frequency ratios, on the other hand, evoke feelings of tension or "dissonance".
224                                              Feelings of tension, depression, fatigue, vigor, and con
225 aesthesia, people may continue to experience feelings of the size, shape and posture of their body, s
226 mfort zone.' Emotional upset, self-blame and feelings of vulnerability to investigative procedures we
227 designed to elicit negative emotions such as feelings of vulnerability, loss of control, apprehension
228              Furthermore, naltrexone reduced feelings of warmth and increased vasoconstriction during
229     Social exclusion during the game reduced feelings of warmth, increased feelings of anger, and inc
230 We also assessed asked patients' about their feelings on discussing their weight when they have visit
231 ich processing fluency can explain aesthetic feeling or may simply be one component of a more complex
232               No differences in foreign body feeling or quality of life scores were detected.
233 ossible mechanisms underlying limitations in feeling others' pain, and present new, more specific, br
234  severe, unexpected episodes contributing to feeling 'out of a comfort zone.' Emotional upset, self-b
235 ed by intermediaries led to individual staff feeling personally supported.
236 erview Schedule-Revised (CIS-R) and Mood and Feelings Questionnaire (MFQ), thus allowing internal rep
237  as measured with the self-reported Mood and Feelings Questionnaire (MFQ).
238 mptoms were measured with the Short Mood and Feelings Questionnaire (SMFQ) at age 13 years in the GUI
239  self-reported depressive symptoms (Mood and Feelings Questionnaire [MFQ]) at each timepoint.
240 All participants also completed the Mood and Feelings Questionnaire, a self-report measure of current
241 ngs can paradoxically co-occur with positive feelings, raising important implications for individual
242 ed to write about their deepest thoughts and feelings regarding their cancer (EW) or about neutral to
243                        Fathers also reported feeling sad, hurt, or angry when providers were nonchala
244           Only 22/131 (16%) fathers reported feeling sad, hurt, or angry.
245 of factors promoting patients' perception of feeling safe during an intensive care admission.
246        Nurses can increase the perception of feeling safe in critically ill patients by taking into a
247                                              Feeling safe in the intensive care unit is of great impo
248 omote intensive care patients' perception of feeling safe.
249 ales scores of breathlessness, perception of feeling secure, and improvement of respiratory function
250                    Consciousness consists of feeling, sentience, or awareness with (i) qualitativenes
251 eclinical models if we take animal emotional feelings seriously, as opposed to just behavioral change
252                                Among adults, feeling sick (15.9%, 95% CI 13.0%-18.8%) was a more comm
253 tness, consistently judged another's skin as feeling softer and smoother than their own skin.
254 e marker was associated with a mixed-valence feeling state, whereas the empathic distress marker was
255 ral computations representing and predicting feeling states in self and others, likely guiding adapti
256 anges in the brain and body and 2) conscious feeling states reflected in self-reports of fear and anx
257                                         Many feelings, such as anger, contempt, shame, confusion, and
258     We propose that sharing a third person's feelings synchronizes the observer's own brain mechanism
259 s of normality and perceived independence', 'feeling terrified' and 'fluctuating emotions' illustrate
260 nificantly higher levels of social exclusion feelings than nonanxious controls.
261                     Sense of agency (SoA), a feeling that one's voluntary actions produce events in t
262          Sense of agency (SoA) refers to the feeling that one's voluntary actions produce external se
263 work [odds ratio (OR): 1.22, P = 0.035], yet feeling that work caused family strain (OR: 1.66, P < 0.
264 mple, tip-of-the-tongue states are conscious feelings that arise when recall fails.
265 ence has shown that social pain--the painful feelings that follow from social rejection, exclusion, o
266 s that the anterior insular cortex engenders feelings that provide an amodal valuation of homeostatic
267 rk has probed social norm violations and the feelings that such violations engender; however, a compu
268                    The observer reported the feelings that the stimulus evoked.
269 (a) the need for an emotional "balance;" (b) feeling the need to cry; (c) feeling the need to talk.
270  "balance;" (b) feeling the need to cry; (c) feeling the need to talk.
271 s are not directly responsible for conscious feelings, they provide nonconscious inputs that coalesce
272 nduced phase III contractions induced hunger feelings through a cholinergic pathway.
273 on their emotional states and appraise their feelings throughout the experiment, whereas the other ha
274 rs of happy memories can bring back pleasant feelings tied to the original experience, suggesting an
275 ortunities to communicate their thoughts and feelings to others and that doing so engages neural and
276 g computers to patients at visits), patients feeling "too ill" in 8 (16.7%), patient refusal in 8 (16
277 ue, and ratings of cocaine "liking" (hedonic feelings toward cocaine) and "wanting" (craving for coca
278  social behaviors, anthropomorphism, uncanny feelings toward robots, and the formation of emotional a
279 end-of-life decision-making process, nurses' feelings toward their patients and physicians' feelings
280 elings toward their patients and physicians' feelings toward their patients' families influence the d
281 negative feelings towards self, and negative feelings towards other.
282 empt, while 'feelings of calm' and 'positive feelings towards self' associated negatively.
283 re: positive feelings towards self, negative feelings towards self, and negative feelings towards oth
284 identified within the AIRS measure: positive feelings towards self, negative feelings towards self, a
285 and the agreement to sobriety), participants feeling under surveillance, and the use of the anklet as
286                               In addition to feeling unpleasant, guilt is metaphorically described as
287 hallenges; Sharing the Experience; Learning; Feeling Unprepared, Responses to Death and Finding Benef
288                                    Moreover, feeling unsafe can result in distress.
289                                     Although feeling unsafe was associated with screen time, screen t
290 l (helmet and seatbelt use) and intentional (feeling unsafe, having something stolen, and physical fi
291 ivalence about donation: doubts and worries, feeling unsure about donation, wishing someone else woul
292 dds ratio, 0.55; 95% CI, 0.45-0.67) of their feelings versus their professional activity, less likely
293  serious problem with therapy; most reported feeling very informed (421 of 483 [87%]) and having high
294 ore commonly cited barrier to adherence than feeling well (9.3%, 95% CI 7.2%-11.4%).
295    The most common reasons for gaps included feeling well, being unaware that follow-up was required,
296                                        These feelings were associated with anxiety states with rumina
297                                     Positive feelings were reduced when there was no high-value optio
298 nses were characterized by stronger negative feelings when working with lower-functioning patients.
299 ith the exception of subjective thoughts and feelings which are more modern fields of enquiry.
300 onthly were 51 percent less likely to report feeling "worried, tense, or anxious" about repaying, wer
301 s of positive emotion when reporting current feelings, yet patients report lower levels of positive e

WebLSDに未収録の専門用語(用法)は "新規対訳" から投稿できます。
 
Page Top