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Section 3
Emotional Control

Question 3 | Test | Table of Contents

The video below is a section of a seminar lecture given by an instructor.

Reviewed 2023

Update
Impact of childhood maltreatment and resilience on behavioral and
neural patterns of inhibitory control during emotional distraction

- Marchand, D. L. P., Carvalho, L. S. R., Leal, D. S., Câmara, S. G., Madazio, G., Behlau, M., & Demers, L. A., Hunt, R. H., Cicchetti, D., Cohen-Gilbert, J. E., Rogosch, F. A., Toth, S. L., & Thomas, K. M. (2022). Impact of childhood maltreatment and resilience on behavioral and neural patterns of inhibitory control during emotional distraction. Development and psychopathology, 34(4), 1260–1271. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0954579421000055


Peer-Reviewed Journal Article References:

Bernecker, K., & Job, V. (2017). Implicit theories about willpower in resisting temptations and emotion control. Zeitschrift für Psychologie, 225(2), 157–166.

Fuochi, G., Veneziani, C. A., & Voci, A. (2018). Differences in the way to conceive happiness relate to different reactions to negative events. Journal of Individual Differences, 39(1), 27–38

Rovenpor, D. R., & Isbell, L. M. (2018). Do emotional control beliefs lead people to approach positive or negative situations? Two competing effects of control beliefs on emotional situation selection. Emotion, 18(3), 313–331.

Wyczesany, M., Adamczyk, A. K., Ligeza, T. S., Bereś, A., & Marchewka, A. (2020). Implicit induction of emotional control—A comparative fMRI investigation of self-control and reappraisal goal pursuit. Emotion. Advance online publication. 

QUESTION 3
How did the speaker disprove the common excuse that other people control your emotions?
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