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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons™
Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
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- Affective Disorders; Bipolar Disorder; Emotion processing; Emotional intelligence; Emotions and cognition; Manic-depressive illness; Neuroanatomy; Neurocognitive; Neuropsychology (1)
- Cerebral dominance; Descriptive; Experience; Laterality; Left- and right-handedness – Psychological aspects; Sampling; Self-consciousness (Awareness); Thought and thinking (1)
Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Examining The Inner Experience Of Left-Handers Using Descriptive Experience Sampling, Aadee Mizrachi
Examining The Inner Experience Of Left-Handers Using Descriptive Experience Sampling, Aadee Mizrachi
UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones
Research suggests that there are anatomical asymmetries of the human brain in relation to hand preference. In addition, left-handedness has been related to a wide range of psychological and physical problems. Despite these relationships, little is known about the inner experience of left-handers. The present study used Descriptive Experience Sampling (DES) to explore the inner experience of 6 left-handed participants. Descriptive Experience Sampling is a nonquantitative sampling method designed to explore and describe inner experience. Undergraduate psychology students were recruited from UNLV to participate in the study. Recruitment consisted of three phases: screening, qualification, and sampling. Students who reported writing …
Neuropsychological And Emotion Processing Abnormalities In Bipolar Disorder I And Ii, Carol Randall
Neuropsychological And Emotion Processing Abnormalities In Bipolar Disorder I And Ii, Carol Randall
UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones
Bipolar disorder illness is marked by emotional lability and mood disturbance, as well as various neuropsychological deficits, and the neuroanatomical correlates of many of these deficits are beginning to be identified. Numerous studies have implicated specific cortical and sub-cortical abnormalities in areas associated with executive function, memory, motor function, and the processing of emotion. Although a large body of research has been devoted to the investigation of cognitive and emotion-processing deficits in bipolar disorder, relatively few studies have been devoted to the investigation of how these deficits differ among bipolar disorder subtypes. This is surprising in light of known symptomatological …