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  1. Control anger before it controls you

    Nov 3, 2023 · Simply put, this means changing the way you think. Angry people tend to curse, swear, or speak in highly colorful terms that reflect their inner thoughts. When you’re angry, your thinking can get very exaggerated and overly dramatic. Try …

  2. Perception of Facial Expressions Differs Across Cultures

    “By conducting this study, we hoped to show that people from different cultures think about facial expressions in different ways,” said lead researcher Rachael E. Jack, PhD, of the University of Glasgow. “East Asians and Western Caucasians differ in terms of the features they think constitute an angry face or a happy face.”

  3. Abuse linked to anger fixation - American Psychological …

    Sep 1, 2003 · In investigations into the psychological problems abused children face during development and as adults, researchers are beginning to examine brain mechanisms linked to these problems. One clue to the involvement of such mechanisms may be the tendency of abused children to pay inordinate attention to angry or threatening stimuli.

  4. A case for angry men and happy women

    Apr 1, 2007 · For example, perhaps we see more men with angry faces--on television, in movies--than we see women with angry faces, so our brains are well practiced at recognizing an angry expression on a man. To investigate this possibility, one of the co-authors, Arizona State University graduate student K.C. Blackwell, suggested they flip the experiment ...

  5. Strategies for controlling your anger: Keeping anger in check

    Others get angry less often, but when they do it comes out as explosive bouts of rage. Whatever shape it takes, uncontrolled anger can negatively affect physical health and emotional wellbeing. Research shows that anger and hostility can increase people's chances of developing coronary heart disease, and lead to worse outcomes in people who ...

  6. Coping with challenging clients - American Psychological …

    Some — whether they're in court-mandated treatment or pushed into therapy by spouses or parents — just don't want to be in therapy. Challenging clients aren't just a problem for clinical and counseling psychologists, either. Forensic psychologists, such as those working as postdivorce parenting coordinators, can also face hostility.

  7. What's behind that smile? - American Psychological Association …

    Oct 1, 2020 · Other researchers, including Cowen and Tracy, have also called for a more “comprehensive atlas” of human emotions, which would look beyond the face to consider other clues to a person’s feelings, such as the sounds they’re making and the way they’re moving their bodies (Cowen, A., et al., Psychological Science in the Public Interest ...

  8. Gen Z adults and younger millennials are “completely …

    Nov 1, 2023 · “People in their 60s who are from the baby boom generation are not exactly dealing with the same stress as those in earlier-born generations,” Poon said. And older adults from different racial and ethnic backgrounds, those in rural America, and those who identify as LGBTQA+ all face varying types and intensities of stressors.

  9. A new look at self-injury - American Psychological Association (APA)

    Jul 1, 2015 · For years, psychologists theorized that such self-harming behaviors helped to regulate these sufferers' negative emotions. If a person is feeling bad, angry, upset, anxious or depressed and lacks a better way to express it, self-injury may fill that role.

  10. Federal workers are dealing with chaotic work environments.

    Apr 10, 2025 · Without these approaches, remaining employees feel stressed and angry about how decisions were made, leading to lower engagement and productivity (Manson, B. J., Downsizing Issues: The Impact on Employee Morale and Productivity, Routledge, 2014). For many employees, chronic stress in the workplace causes harm to both physical and mental …

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