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1  mechanism evolved to help individuals avoid shame.
2 chological distress by reducing internalized shame.
3 e evaluations from others should elicit more shame.
4 nals described feelings of guilt (53.8%) and shame (42.5%).
5      Participants struggled with feelings of shame and believed that others possessed stigmatizing at
6 s devaluation in the others, suggesting that shame and devaluation are informed by a common species-w
7 nstration of a close, specific match between shame and devaluation within and across cultures.
8 h fecal and urinary incontinence in terms of shame and embarrassment and report that it causes them t
9  current thinking on the distinction between shame and guilt, and the relative advantages and disadva
10 us decades, much research remains focused on shame and guilt.
11  of vicarious or "collective" experiences of shame and guilt.
12 remember the mass murder at Port Arthur with shame and horror as a personal affront, rather than simp
13 ess and small, muting compassion, guilt, and shame and potentiating anger, disgust, and mirth.
14 igma predicted higher levels of internalized shame and self-blame and lower levels of social support
15 ifferences between embarrassment, guilt, and shame and their relations to moral behavior is reviewed,
16 hroughout Australia, an outpouring of grief, shame, and anger followed this tragic event and led quic
17  The development and socialization of guilt, shame, and empathy also are discussed briefly.
18 distress via cancer disclosure, internalized shame, and social support availability.
19 tween childhood abuse and later proneness to shame, and the phenomena of vicarious or "collective" ex
20 ck, grief, guilt, fear of blame, self-doubt, shame, anger, and betrayal were the major emotional reac
21                                As predicted, shame closely tracks the threat of devaluation in the Un
22                      For participants in the shame condition, there were no significant differences i
23      Many feelings, such as anger, contempt, shame, confusion, and pride, come about through complex
24 s Pappworth believed that only by naming and shaming could any expose act as a deterrent.
25                                          The shame-devaluation link is also specific: Sadness and anx
26  with muscle dysmorphia frequently described shame, embarrassment, and impairment of social and occup
27                      We test the theory that shame evolved as a defense against being devalued by oth
28 ss and anxiety-emotions that coactivate with shame-fail to track devaluation.
29 ur domains (functioning, fatigue/mood, fears/shame, food) showed good levels of internal consistency
30 orced in part by internal sanctions, such as shame, guilt and loss of self-esteem, as opposed to pure
31 egatively valenced "self-conscious" emotions-shame, guilt, and embarrassment.
32                                    Moreover, shame in each country strongly tracks devaluation in the
33 idence was shown for increased rejection and shame in people bereaved by suicide across a range of ki
34                               By hypothesis, shame is a neurocomputational program tailored by select
35 pansion) and self-conscious emotions (guilt, shame, pride, social anxiety, and embarrassment), with a
36 nomenon of body shame, styles of coping with shame, psychobiological aspects of shame, the link betwe
37 ch on the domain-specific phenomenon of body shame, styles of coping with shame, psychobiological asp
38 ssary activation of a defense is costly, the shame system should estimate the magnitude of the devalu
39 ping with shame, psychobiological aspects of shame, the link between childhood abuse and later pronen
40 ficult math task designed to induce anger or shame while their cardiovascular responses were measured

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