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1  increase under anger (as opposed to fear or sadness).
2 all negative emotions (anger, disgust, fear, sadness).
3 izing negative emotions, especially fear and sadness.
4 ppiness, surprise, fear, anger, disgust, and sadness.
5  no impairment in recognizing expressions of sadness.
6 ission in response to experimentally induced sadness.
7 : SEEKING, CARING, PLAYFULNESS, FEAR, ANGER, SADNESS.
8 nstructs such as fear, anger, happiness, and sadness.
9 eas dopamine deficiency can cause anxiety or sadness.
10 are associated with feelings of happiness or sadness.
11  anger, disgust, fear, pleasure, relief, and sadness.
12           Brief ostracism episodes result in sadness and anger and threaten fundamental needs.
13 mages of faces expressing varying degrees of sadness and anger.
14 The shame-devaluation link is also specific: Sadness and anxiety-emotions that coactivate with shame-
15 ressions of anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness and emotional neutrality and analyzed amygdala's
16 ical processes that mediate the enjoyment of sadness and horror may be fundamentally different.
17         Recognition of anger, disgust, fear, sadness and surprise (but not happiness) was associated
18 or depressive episode, dysphoria (2 weeks of sadness), and psychotropic medication use were assessed
19 or tension, 2.2 (95% CI, 0.7-6.4; P=.16) for sadness, and 2.2 (95% CI, 1.1-4.3; P<.05) for frustratio
20 or tension, 2.9 (95% CI, 1.0-8.0; P<.05) for sadness, and 2.6 (95% CI, 1.3-5.1; P<.01) for frustratio
21 sures were the DRF symptoms of irritability, sadness, and anxiety.
22 e were 12 conditions per subject: happiness, sadness, and disgust and three control conditions, each
23                                   Happiness, sadness, and disgust are three emotions that differ in t
24                                   Happiness, sadness, and disgust were each associated with increases
25  of the brain that participate in happiness, sadness, and disgust, regions that distinguish between p
26 cal and emotional symptoms, such as fatigue, sadness, and fear, and these were experienced at the mod
27 iary ratings of 3 negative emotions-tension, sadness, and frustration-and 2 positive emotions-happine
28 pression and premenstrual-related tiredness, sadness, and irritability were assessed twice over 6 yea
29 llele was associated with suicidal ideation, sadness, and worthlessness, but not neurovegetative symp
30 or emotions with negative valence, including sadness, anger and fear, than for happiness.
31 and intensity of experiences of joy, stress, sadness, anger, and affection that make one's life pleas
32  actresses showing four emotions: happiness, sadness, anger, and fear, each in posed and evoked condi
33 tion impairment and specific impairments for sadness, anger, and fear.
34 ubjects viewed facial displays of happiness, sadness, anger, fear, and disgust as well as neutral fac
35 ), hedonic wellbeing (feelings of happiness, sadness, anger, stress, and pain), and eudemonic wellbei
36 th fatigue and hypersomnia, but less so with sadness, anhedonia, and appetite loss.
37 antic breakups were marked by high levels of sadness, anhedonia, appetite loss, and (for romantic bre
38 everal core PMDD symptoms (ie, irritability, sadness, anxiety, food cravings, and bloating) on dutast
39 ive affect task was associated with fear and sadness behaviors.
40 ly with basic emotions such as happiness and sadness but also with so-called music-specific or "aesth
41             Happiness was distinguished from sadness by greater activity in the vicinity of ventral m
42 ported feelings of tension, frustration, and sadness, can more than double the risk of myocardial isc
43  We contest the claim that musically induced sadness cannot be enjoyable in itself.
44             Changes in BP during a sustained sadness challenge were obtained by comparing it with the
45 d craving, and decreased negative affect and sadness compared with placebo, while having little effec
46                                The sustained sadness condition was associated with a statistically si
47                                The sustained sadness condition was associated with a statistically si
48 reased subgenual cingulate activation during sadness conditions.
49 their emotions (anger, guilt, fear, fatigue, sadness), could inform preparation and education for pre
50 t of frequent and obvious mood symptoms, ie, sadness, crying, and irritability.
51               At least 1 depressive symptom (sadness, depression, hopelessness, loss of interest, or
52 ntrols (P = NS), except for proxy-reports of sadness/depression.
53 ntrols (P = NS), except for proxy-reports of sadness/depression.
54 n the CAAMQ identified patients' feelings of sadness, distress, and the importance of strong family s
55 tually redundant with symptoms of persistent sadness, even in the absence of major depression, and im
56 rs portraying four basic emotions (Happiness Sadness, Fear and Anger).
57 asic categories--happiness, surprise, anger, sadness, fear, and disgust.
58 o understand the relationship between normal sadness, grief, and depression.
59 ered to all respondents reporting persistent sadness (&gt; or = 2 weeks) or the equivalent.
60  of six emotional states (relief, happiness, sadness, guilt, anger, and worry) after disclosure that
61 experienced personal life episodes marked by sadness, happiness, anger or fear.
62  to 3.16) Other mood states (anxiety, worry, sadness, happiness, challenge, feeling in control, or in
63 ered brain activity in regions identified in sadness imaging studies: the cerebellum, anterior tempor
64 change accompanying provocation of transient sadness in healthy volunteers and resolution of chronic
65    We propose that the affective reversal of sadness in music is due to the high granularity of music
66 ) and withdrawal-related behaviors (fear and sadness) in 6-month-old infants.
67 tinct emotional experiences (e.g., anger and sadness) in a factor analysis, suggesting that each subr
68 he role of nonmoral emotions (e.g. anger and sadness), including moods and dispositional differences
69                                         With sadness, increases in limbic-paralimbic blood flow (subg
70 uction impacted IL-18 (F2,25=12.2, P<0.001), sadness increasing IL-18 (T27=2.6, P=0.01) and neutral m
71 25=3.6, P=0.03) and linearly proportional to sadness-induced mu-opioid activation (left ventral palli
72        The inhibitory effects of cortisol on sadness-induced subgenual cingulate activity may have cr
73 ss would persist beyond their memory for the sadness-inducing films.
74             The amnesic patients underwent a sadness induction procedure (using affectively-laden fil
75                                              Sadness induction was associated with greater reductions
76 n in patients with bipolar disorder, whereas sadness; insomnia; intellectual (cognitive), somatic (mu
77      Symptoms of intense bereavement-related sadness may resemble those of major depressive disorder
78    Of 2,071 individuals reporting persistent sadness or the equivalent, 97.2% (N=2,016) satisfied cri
79 te gain, and thoughts of self-harm, but less sadness or trouble concentrating.
80 orse patient-physician relationship ratings, sadness, or anxiety in adjusted analyses.
81 ch of five categories--fear, anger, disgust, sadness, or happiness--is engaged by a study with 66% ac
82                                              Sadness ratings increased significantly following negati
83 ng the experimental induction of a sustained sadness state.
84 positive affect ratings during the sustained sadness state.
85 uring a neutral state and during a sustained sadness state.
86 1)C]carfentanil during neutral and sustained sadness states in 18 unmedicated female patients with bo
87                        Sustained neutral and sadness states, randomized and counterbalanced in order,
88 es to the words "fear," "disgust," "anger," "sadness," "surprise," and "happiness."
89 derstand, perhaps reluctantly and with great sadness, that intensive caring may involve letting go of
90                   Yet I also feel a sense of sadness; the invitation to present the lecture came from
91            Prior-day feelings of loneliness, sadness, threat, and lack of control were associated wit
92 zes being moved as a mixed emotion linked to sadness through metonymy.
93 -treatment amygdala reactivity to subliminal sadness was a differential moderator of non-response to
94                                     Recalled sadness was associated with increased activation in the
95                             Recall-generated sadness was associated with significantly greater increa
96 ed through middle age and then declined, and Sadness was essentially flat.
97 ant decrease in mu-opioid receptor BP during sadness was observed in patients with MDD who did not re
98 s continued to experience elevated levels of sadness well beyond the point in time at which they had
99 ger reductions in mu-opioid system BP during sadness were obtained in patients with MDD in the anteri
100                       Fatigue, distress, and sadness were the single strongest predictors of total sy
101 ron emission tomography after provocation of sadness with autobiographical memory scripts.
102 Program had greater odds of discussing their sadness with someone at the practice (OR, 0.95 [95% CI,
103 thers at risk for depression discussed their sadness with someone at the practice).
104 insomnia, poor appetite and fatigue, but not sadness, worthlessness, or suicidal ideation.
105 ps) to ascertain whether their experience of sadness would persist beyond their memory for the sadnes

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