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1.
Sci Rep ; 14(1): 6706, 2024 03 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38509160

ABSTRACT

This study investigates the relationship between labor values and two forms of envy-benign and malicious-as well as the potential mediating role of mindfulness using a mindfulness reperceiving model. Two thousand three hundred sixty three Chinese teenagers participated in a longitudinal study over an eight-month period, completing questionnaires measuring labor values, benign envy, malicious envy, and mindfulness. The cross-sectional data showed that labor values had an immediate negative effect on malicious envy, with mindfulness partially mediating this relationship. Additionally, labor values had an immediate positive effect on benign envy, but mindfulness did not mediate this relationship. Longitudinal data analysis revealed that the delayed effect of labor values on later benign/malicious envy was similar to its immediate effect. However, mindfulness only played a mediating role in the relationship between labor values and later malicious envy. Cross-gender stability was found in both the immediate effect model and the delayed effect model. Overall, this study sheds light on the influence of labor values on the development of social emotions and the potential mediating role of mindfulness in the Chinese cultural context.


Subject(s)
Jealousy , Mindfulness , Adolescent , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Cross-Sectional Studies , Emotions
2.
Psicol. ciênc. prof ; 43: e251630, 2023. tab
Article in Portuguese | LILACS, INDEXPSI | ID: biblio-1448947

ABSTRACT

Este estudo qualitativo teve como objetivo compreender, a partir da teoria de bioecológica de desenvolvimento, as implicações da prática profissional no processo de acolhimento de crianças em uma casa-abrigo, na perspectiva de cuidadoras. As participantes foram 10 profissionais de uma casa-abrigo localizada na região sul do Brasil. Utilizou-se a entrevista semiestruturada e a organização e análise dos dados sustentou-se na Grounded Theory, com auxílio do software Atlas.ti 8.4.14. Os resultados evidenciaram uma centralização das ações de acolhimento e atenção em torno dos cuidados físicos das crianças. As ações para promover suporte e cuidados emocionais dentro da casa-abrigo eram delegadas às profissionais da equipe técnica da instituição. Observou-se que as dificuldades encontradas pelas cuidadoras diziam respeito à falta de segurança e preparação para responder e acolher as demandas emocionais das crianças, as quais estão presentes em diversos momentos do processo de acolhimento. Percebeu-se que as práticas institucionais afetaram decisivamente tanto as ações de acolhimento das participantes e o suporte emocional oferecido às crianças na passagem pela casa-abrigo quanto as cuidadoras, no sentido de vivenciarem no trabalho sentimentos de insegurança. Os resultados tensionam ecologicamente a interação nos processos proximais presentes no desenvolvimento humano. Advoga-se pela reflexão sobre as implicações das práticas institucionais de uma casa-abrigo e o desenvolvimento infantil, visando o cuidado integral dos acolhidos.(AU)


Based on the developmental bioecological theory, this study analyzes the implications of professional practice in children's user embracement at a shelter from the caregivers' perspective. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 10 professionals from a shelter located in southern Brazil. Data organization and analysis was performed based on Grounded Theory using the Atlas.ti 8.4.14 software. Results showed that embracement and attention focus on the physical care of children. Support and emotional care activities were delegated to the institution's technical team. Caregivers faced difficulties regarding the lack of security and preparation to respond to and accept the children's emotional demands, which arise at different moments in the embracement process. The institutional practices decisively affected both user embracement actions and the emotional support offered to the children, as well as the caregivers, in the sense of experiencing feelings of insecurity. These findings ecologically tension the interaction in the proximal processes present in human development. Further reflections on the implications of institutional shelter-based practices for child development are needed to provide comprehensive care.(AU)


Este estudio cualitativo tuvo como objetivo comprender, desde la perspectiva de la teoría bioecológica del desarrollo, las implicaciones de la práctica profesional en el proceso de acogida de niños en una institución infantil desde la perspectiva de las cuidadoras. Las participantes fueron 10 profesionales de una institución de acogida infantil ubicada en la región Sur de Brasil. Se utilizó la entrevista semiestructurada, y para la organización y análisis de datos se aplicó Grounded Theory, con el uso del software Atlas.ti 8.4.14. Los resultados mostraron que las acciones de recepción y atención se centran en el cuidado físico de los niños. Las acciones de promoción de apoyo y cuidado emocional dentro del alojamiento se asignaron a los profesionales del equipo técnico de la institución. Se observó que las dificultades encontradas por las cuidadoras estaban relacionadas con la falta de seguridad y preparación para responder y aceptar las demandas emocionales de los niños, las cuales se encuentran presentes en diferentes momentos del proceso de acogida. Se notó que las prácticas institucionales afectaron decisivamente tanto las acciones de acogida de las participantes como el apoyo emocional que la institución brinda a los niños durante su paso, así como a las cuidadoras en el sentido de experimentar sentimientos de inseguridad en el trabajo. Estos resultados tensan ecológicamente la interacción en los procesos proximales presentes en el desarrollo humano. Se aboga por reflexionar sobre las implicaciones de las prácticas institucionales en los alojamientos institucionales y el desarrollo infantil, apuntando a la atención integral de los acogidos.(AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Female , Adult , Middle Aged , Professional Practice , Child , Caregivers , Ecology , User Embracement , Human Development , Pain , Parent-Child Relations , Paternal Behavior , Paternal Deprivation , Play and Playthings , Poverty , Psychology , Psychology, Social , Safety , Attention , Sibling Relations , Sleep , Social Adjustment , Social Change , Social Conditions , Social Environment , Social Justice , Social Problems , Social Support , Sociology , Sports , Violence , Battered Child Syndrome , Women , Child Labor , Adoption , Divorce , Family , Child, Abandoned , Child Abuse , Child Advocacy , Child Development , Child, Institutionalized , Child Rearing , Child, Unwanted , Child Welfare , Residence Characteristics , Family Characteristics , Health , Hygiene , Child of Impaired Parents , Liability, Legal , Hunger , Civil Disorders , Parenting , Interview , Domestic Violence , Cultural Diversity , Life , Crime Victims , Alcohol-Related Disorders , Affect , Culture , Personal Autonomy , Official Instructions , Defense Mechanisms , Adult Children , Stress Disorders, Traumatic , Qualitative Research , Friends , Minors , Adolescent Development , Human Rights Abuses , Diet , Alcoholism , Empathy , Health of Institutionalized Children , Family Conflict , Family Relations , Drug Users , Chemically-Induced Disorders , Enslaved Persons , Grounded Theory , Grandparents , Psychological Trauma , Child, Adopted , Child, Foster , Freedom , Adverse Childhood Experiences , Family Separation , Psychological Distress , Right to Health , Emotional Abuse , Freedom of Religion , Social Interaction , Sociodemographic Factors , Social Vulnerability , Citizenship , Family Support , Household Work , Human Rights , Individuality , Institutionalization , Jealousy , Leisure Activities , Loneliness , Love , Malpractice , Maternal Deprivation , Mental Disorders , Motivation , Object Attachment
3.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35627463

ABSTRACT

Public safety personnel (PSP) face frequent stressors that increase their risk of developing symptoms of depression and anxiety. In addition to being exposed to potentially traumatic events, PSP trainees may face a compounded risk of developing mental health symptoms, as their training environments are conducive to social comparisons and the resultant painful emotion of envy. Envy is associated with numerous negative health and occupational outcomes. Fortunately, there are several individual difference factors associated with increased emotional regulation, and such factors may offer resilience against the damaging mental health effects of envy. In this study, we examined the interplay between dispositional mindfulness, self-compassion, and dispositional envy in predicting job satisfaction, stress, experience of positive and negative emotions, subjective resilience, and symptoms of depression and anxiety in a sample of police trainees (n = 104). A substantial minority of trainees reported clinically significant symptoms of depression (n = 19:18.3%) and anxiety (n = 24:23.1%) in accordance with the cut-off scores on screening measures. Consistent with hypotheses, dispositional envy was associated with lower job satisfaction, greater stress, and greater anxiety and depression. Furthermore, envy was associated with higher negative emotions, lower positive emotions, and lower subjective resilience. Dispositional mindfulness and self-compassion were associated with greater job satisfaction, lower stress, and reduced symptoms of depression and anxiety. Moreover, mindfulness and self-compassion were both associated with lower negative emotions, higher positive emotions, and subjective resilience. The associations between envy and the relevant job and mental health outcomes were significantly diminished after controlling for mindfulness and self-compassion. This suggests that these protective traits may serve as transdiagnostic buffers to the effects of envy on mental health. The results of this study confirmed the damaging effects of envy and suggested the potential remediation of these effects through the cultivation of mindfulness and self-compassion.


Subject(s)
Mindfulness , Empathy , Jealousy , Mental Health , Mindfulness/methods , Self-Compassion
4.
Psych J ; 10(6): 898-904, 2021 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34755495

ABSTRACT

Envy is a mixed negative emotion that is characterized by feelings of hostility, inferiority, resentment, and depression. It has been found that mindfulness is negatively associated with envy. This paper aimed to explore the interaction between mindfulness and envy by referring to the mindful emotion regulation model, and it also examines the mediation of emotional intelligence. Six hundred and seventy-six participants (182 men and 494 women) completed the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale, the Dispositional Envy Scale, and the Wong Law Emotional Intelligence Scale. Results suggest that mindfulness is significantly and negatively correlated with envy. Meanwhile, a multiple mediation analysis indicated that regulation of emotion and use of emotion partially mediate the impact of mindfulness on envy. The current study not only provides a theoretical basis for possible mechanisms underlying the inhibition of envy, but also provides valuable guidance for developing mindfulness-based intervention programs aiming at reducing the negative effects of envy.


Subject(s)
Emotional Regulation , Mindfulness , Emotional Intelligence , Emotions , Female , Humans , Jealousy , Male
5.
Scand J Psychol ; 61(3): 436-442, 2020 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31840272

ABSTRACT

At present, mindfulness is a hotspot in psychological research. Mindfulness is an effective tool that enables people to effectively inhibit negative emotions. Previous studies have shown that envy is a typical negative emotion; however, envy can be divided into two completely different types: benign envy and malicious envy. The question then arises, how does mindfulness affect both types of envy? Using a mindfulness reperceiving model, we explored the effect of mindfulness on these two different types of envy and on the mediating mechanism of psychological resilience. To accomplish this, we recruited 676 Chinese undergraduates to complete the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale (MAAS), the Benign and Malicious Envy Scale (BEMAS) and the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC). The results we obtained showed that mindfulness and psychological resilience significantly and negatively predicted malicious envy and that psychological resilience played a partially mediating role in the relationship. In addition, the results showed that there was no significant effect between mindfulness and benign envy; however, psychological resilience can significantly and positively predict benign envy and played a completely mediating role between mindfulness and benign envy. These results effectively extend theories based on the mindfulness reperceiving model while also being important for promoting benign envy and inhibiting malicious envy in terms of improving mindfulness and psychological resilience.


Subject(s)
Emotional Regulation , Jealousy , Mindfulness/methods , Resilience, Psychological , Female , Humans , Male , Models, Psychological , Psychological Techniques , Self-Control , Students/psychology , Young Adult
6.
Arch Sex Behav ; 43(7): 1281-8, 2014 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24647817

ABSTRACT

Previous studies have found that males are more upset over sexual infidelity than females whereas females are more upset over emotional infidelity than males. We hypothesized that such sex differences are explained by explicit sexual imagery by males. The hypothesis was tested in a laboratory using vivid infidelity scenarios and photographs to induce detailed and sexually oriented imagery of a partner's infidelity. In the main experiment, participants included 64 males and 64 females who were currently in committed relationships. The results showed that participants became more upset when they imagined sexual infidelity vividly and realistically than when they did not and there were no significant sex differences in jealousy found when sexual infidelity was imagined in this matter. Overall, our findings suggested that the sex differences in jealousy resulted from males' tendency to imagine sexual infidelity more vividly than females.


Subject(s)
Extramarital Relations/psychology , Jealousy , Sexual Partners/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Female , Humans , Imagination , Male , Sex Factors , Young Adult
7.
Int J Psychoanal ; 93(4): 819-35, 2012 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22900551

ABSTRACT

In this article the author argues that in order to be psychoanalysis, the 'here and now' technical approach needs to be firmly grounded theoretically and technically in a practice that includes the notion of reverie or its equivalent. The author has argued previously that the analyst's theory is the essential 'third' of the two-person analytic situation. She now suggests that it is specifically the theories of temporality and the attitude of 'evenly suspended attention' or its more contemporary development, 'reverie', that are the crucial aspects of that theory. She refers to these essential aspects as the 'theory in practice' in so far as they are more than a technical approach or a theory of practice but reflect directly a particular analyst's internalisation of the whole psychoanalytic theoretical corpus. While she believes this to be an essential component in any true psychoanalysis, in developing her argument the author looks at situations in which the analyst is particularly prone to forgo this temporal aspect, as is the case when patients show an absence of symbolic thinking within the analytic situation. In fact, with those patients reverie and the visual images it produces within the analyst's mind offer perhaps the only hope of a meeting ground between the concrete and the symbolic and the possibility of avoiding an impasse. Impasse, she suggests, has at its root the absence of reverie as a third and temporal element, inevitably giving rise to concrete thinking on the part of patient and analyst and so to a situation that cannot evolve.


Subject(s)
Attention , Psychoanalytic Theory , Psychoanalytic Therapy/methods , Symbolism , Anxiety Disorders/psychology , Anxiety Disorders/therapy , Body Image , Breast Implantation/psychology , Defense Mechanisms , Emotions , Female , Freudian Theory , Humans , Imagery, Psychotherapy/methods , Jealousy , Language , Male , Middle Aged , Narcissism , Physician-Patient Relations , Projection , Psychoanalytic Interpretation , Thinking
8.
Psychol Sci ; 21(11): 1671-7, 2010 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20889930

ABSTRACT

The fear of being envied makes people act prosocially, in an attempt to ward off the potentially destructive effects of envy. In three experiments, people who were in a superior position and could be envied were more likely than control participants to give time-consuming advice to a potentially envious person or to help a potentially envious person pick up erasers she had accidentally scattered. However, helping behavior increased only if envy was likely to be malicious rather than benign. People who were better off did not increase their helping behavior toward people in general, but increased their helping only toward the potentially envious. This finding is consistent with the idea that the better off act more prosocially as an appeasement strategy. The fear of being envied serves useful group functions, because it triggers prosocial behavior that is likely to dampen the potentially destructive effects of envy and simultaneously helps to improve the situation of people who are worse off.


Subject(s)
Fear , Jealousy , Magic , Social Behavior , Achievement , Female , Helping Behavior , Hierarchy, Social , Humans , Male , Social Desirability , Young Adult
10.
Psychoanal Study Child ; 64: 92-111, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20578435

ABSTRACT

The traditional psychoanalytic practice with children focuses on the observation and the interpretation of the child's play. In contrast, in my treatment of Sara, my focus was on playing with the child. Since initially she was unable to play, Ifirst taught her how to act out fantasies in play until, gradually, she became an active participant and, finally, the creator of her own stories. This method was effective because it reproduced the "to and fro" or "optimal responsiveness" between the mother and infant in the first three years of life when the infant/child experience is of being found by the mother. Like the infant/child, my patient's response to our playing was to recognize that her actions evoked meaning for her therapist. Empowered by this selfawareness, she began to participate in the dialogue of fantasy play and, as our stories expanded, she experienced the affirmation and fulfillment of a reciprocal relationship. While lost in play, she experienced being found. Her story demonstrates, poignantly, how a child comes to choose aggression and cruelty as a source of power. For Sara, nurturing and goodness engendered feelings of weakness and helplessness because they stirred up her envy of and intense longing for the good enough mothering that she had never known.


Subject(s)
Adoption/psychology , Fantasy , Play Therapy , Aggression/psychology , Child , Defense Mechanisms , Female , Humans , Jealousy , Mother-Child Relations , Object Attachment , Parenting/psychology , Power, Psychological , Psychoanalytic Interpretation , Psychoanalytic Therapy , Self Concept
12.
Pediatr Blood Cancer ; 50(3): 708-10, 2008 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17009220

ABSTRACT

The youngest siblings may be both emotionally vulnerable and often neglected members of the family of a childhood cancer patient. The prompt identification of signs of distress in these subjects allows trained caregivers to intervene with personalized, age-appropriate, attention, and care. A narrative approach, based on personalized listening, writings, and spontaneous drawings, can provide the means to elicit markers of psychological maladjustment in even the youngest of siblings. Two exemplary cases are reported to illustrate this approach.


Subject(s)
Art Therapy , Neoplasms , Play Therapy , Siblings/psychology , Catheterization, Central Venous/psychology , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Jealousy , Leukemia , Male , Neuroblastoma , Parent-Child Relations , Sibling Relations , Stress, Psychological/etiology , Stress, Psychological/psychology , Stress, Psychological/therapy
13.
Cult Med Psychiatry ; 31(4): 419-44, 2007 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17957456

ABSTRACT

Accumulating evidence suggests that folktales in some societies are characterized by a culturally constructed underlying emotional structure, or Cultural Emotion Schema. In this paper we argue that Matsigenka illness narratives and folk stories share an underlying emotion schema, in which death and suffering result from conflicts between strong-willed individuals prompting anger and aggression. Analysis of illness narratives collected by Izquierdo in the Matsigenka community of Kamisea in the Peruvian Amazon between 1996 and 1999 reveals a common pattern in which envy and frustration lead to the belief in sorcery as the main cause of illness and death. This pattern contrasts with the typical stories of a previous generation collected by the Johnsons among the Matsigenka of Shimaa and other Matsigenka researchers, where sorcery beliefs were virtually absent. Our argument is that important changes in ecology, community, politics, and religion have led to a systematic rise in feelings of envy and frustration, and that these have increased the likelihood that sorcery accusations will occur. We explore the likelihood that such beliefs increase as egalitarian peoples become more crowded into settlements where they are likely to experience greater inequality, more competition for resources and increased societal and personal stress.


Subject(s)
Emotions , Folklore , Indians, South American/psychology , Jealousy , Medicine, Traditional , Punishment , Sick Role , Adult , Aggression/psychology , Anger , Attitude to Death , Culture , Female , Humans , Magic , Male , Peru , Social Change , Social Environment , Witchcraft
14.
Neuroimage ; 32(3): 1299-307, 2006 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16829139

ABSTRACT

Jealousy-related behaviors such as intimate partner violence and morbid jealousy are more common in males. Principal questionnaire studies suggest that men and women have different modules to process cues of sexual and emotional infidelity. We aimed to elucidate the neural response to sentences depicting sexual and emotional infidelity in men and women using functional magnetic resonance imaging. Although there was no sex difference in the self-rating score of jealousy for sexual and emotional infidelity, men and women showed different brain activation patterns in response to the two types of infidelity. During jealous conditions, men demonstrated greater activation than women in the brain regions involved in sexual/aggressive behaviors such as the amygdala and hypothalamus. In contrast, women demonstrated greater activation in the posterior superior temporal sulcus. Our fMRI results are in favor of the notion that men and women have different neuropsychological modules to process sexual and emotional infidelity. Our findings might contribute to a better understanding of the neural basis of the jealousy-related behaviors predominantly observed in males.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiology , Emotions/physiology , Jealousy , Sexual Behavior/physiology , Adult , Amygdala/physiology , Cerebral Cortex/physiology , Female , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Marriage/psychology , Sex Characteristics
15.
An. psiquiatr ; 21(6): 297-301, oct.-nov. 2005. tab
Article in Es | IBECS | ID: ibc-041693

ABSTRACT

El trastorno delirante celotípico es un cuadro conocido y recogido en las clasificaciones CIE-10 y DSM-IV. No obstante existen numerosas lagunas de algunos aspectos destacados del cuadro. Se describe un caso clínico y se discuten las cuestionas más polémicas a la luz de una revisión. Particular interés tiene la terapia de los cuadros delirantes,el tratamiento eficaz, los fármacos más útiles o la duración del tratamiento


The delusive jealousy disorder is today a diagnostic perfectly known and typified in the systems CIE-10 and DSM-IV. However, there still are important lacks of knowledge about other importants aspects of the this pathology. In this paper, we report a case and we discuss about the more polemics questions, consecuence of our revision. Is very important the therapy of the delusional disorder, the effective treatment, the more useful drugs or the duration of treatment


Subject(s)
Female , Adult , Humans , Schizophrenia, Paranoid/diagnosis , Schizophrenia, Paranoid/pathology , Jealousy , Mood Disorders/etiology , Mood Disorders/pathology , Delirium/pathology , Schizophrenia, Paranoid/etiology , Homeosycosics , Mood Disorders/prevention & control , Delirium/etiology
16.
Cahiers bioth ; (176): 21-: 26-24, juin-juil. 2002.
Article in French | HomeoIndex | ID: hom-6918

ABSTRACT

L'envie, si l'on se refere au Dictionnaire Le Robert, se definit par "le sentiment de tristesse, d'irritation et de haine contre ceux qui possedent un bien... ".Elle ne peut, a partir de la, que porter a reflechir sur... (AU)


Subject(s)
Psychic Symptoms , Jealousy , Materia Medica , Materia Medica, Comparative , Homeopathic Repertory
17.
Junguiana ; (18): 67-76, 2000.
Article in Portuguese | INDEXPSI | ID: psi-19098

ABSTRACT

O autor faz uma análise de Bentinho, personagem central do romance Dom Casmurro de Machado de Assis, enfocando aspectos relacionados à psicopatologia do ciúme e da traição, bem como a função psicológica normal do ciúme na estruturação da identidade(AU)


Subject(s)
Jealousy , Projection , Oedipus Complex , Psychopathology , Ego , Psychoanalytic Interpretation , Jungian Theory
18.
Acta homoeopathica argentinensia ; 20(61): 159-171, mayo-ago. 1999.
Article in Spanish | HomeoIndex | ID: biblio-981445
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