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  1. Affective flattening, also known as emotional blunting or reduced affect display, is a term commonly used in psychology to describe a phenomenon where an individual experiences a lack or reduction in their normal range of emotional expression.

  2. Affective flattening is a disorder of emotional expression, of which a good definition is ‘a gross lack of emotional response to the given situation’ (Fish, 1962). It is a clinical sign whose assessment depends upon the clinician's intepretation of the patient's facial expression, tone of voice and content of talk (Harris ' Metcalfe, 1956).

  3. Apr 1, 2002 · Persons who are flattered are more likely to assign credibility to and like the flatterer than observers, presumably because they are motivated by vanity. In existing studies, however, the...

    • Broad Affect. Broad affect refers to the ability of someone to experience the typical range of affective states, from happiness and bliss to sadness, melancholy, and temporary depression (Videbeck, 2019).
    • Restricted Affect. Restricted affect, also known as constricted affect, is when an individual experiences a reduced range of emotional expression, often finding it difficult to reach emotional expression on the extreme ends of negative and positive affect.
    • Blunted Affect. Blunted affect implies a significant reduction in the intensity of affective responses (Kaufmann et al., 2020). When a person has blunted affect, emotional reactions become less noticeable.
    • Flat Affect. Flat affect refers to a sitaution where an individual does not show any significant signs of emotional response at all, positive or negative.
  4. Jul 17, 2023 · A first set of studies (Studies 1-4) detail the variety of factors that lead observers to conclude their leader has fallen for flattery and the resulting impacts to the leaders’ reputation and...

  5. Oct 23, 2008 · An act of flattery typically makes use of excessive commendatory language in describing the qualities or record of another person for the purpose of creating a favorable attitude in that person towards the flatterer. It contains an explicit assertion of alleged merit.

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  7. 1 Introduction. The Oxford English Dictionary defines a stereotype as a “widely held but fixed and oversim- plified image or idea of a particular type of person or thing”. Stereotypes are ubiquitous. Among other things, they cover racial groups (“Asians are good at math”), political groups.

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