Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  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).

  3. Personality psychology is a rapidly maturing science making important advances on both conceptual and methodological fronts. The Cambridge Handbook of Personality Psychology offers a one-stop source for the most up-to-date scientific personality psychology.

    • 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. Apr 1, 2002 · PDF | Persons who are flattered are more likely to assign credibility to and like the flatterer than observers, presumably because they are motivated by... | Find, read and cite all the...

  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.

  6. People also ask

  7. Jul 17, 2023 · research provides evidence that people struggle to maintain skepticism in the face of flattery. Flattery recipients evaluate their flatterers positively due to their desire to believe the good...

  1. People also search for