Emotional Dysregulation Video
TBI Study
Theories on Emotion
Pathologies
Vocabulary

100

Disorders related to emotional dysregulation

What is  Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, Post-traumatic Stress Disorder, and Frontal lobe disorder.

100

What caused the patients TBI? 

Car accident 

100

What system is responsible for physiological changes in regard to stressful emotions?

What is the autonomic nervous system? 

100

Poorly regulated emotional response, reactions are not socially appropriate or extreme

What is emotional dysregulation? 

100

a form of acquired brain injury, occurs when a sudden trauma causes damage to the brain.

What is Traumatic brain injury (TBI)

200

What are some causes of Emotional Dysregulation according to the video?

Traumatic Experiences, Frustration of Physical and emotional needs, bullying, aggression, and victimization.

200

How many years did it take for the patient to show disinhibition in behavior?

6.5

200

emotions are a result of how your body responds to a stimulus. 

What is the James Lange Theory

200

TBI, Trauma, and Frustration of physical and emotional needs

What are common causes of Emotional Dysregulation

200

a term generally used to describe a person’s ability to effectively manage and respond to an emotional experience.

What is Emotional Regulation

300

Emotional dysfunction is characterized by what traits (name 3-4)?

What is Problems in relationships, Depression, suicidal thoughts, Aggression


300

Degeneration of neural cells caused by noxious factors released from neurons that were damaged by the primary direct insult. 

What is secondary degeneration

300

 physiological response and feeling emotions happen simultaneously. 

What is The Cannon-Bard Theory

300

Damage to this area can cause impulsivity, impaired decisions, and lack of motivation

What is Frontal lobe

300

the cerebral cortex covering the front part of the frontal lobe. This brain region has been implicated in planning complex cognitive behavior, personality expression, decision making, and moderating social behavior

What is Prefrontal Cortex

400

The lobe of the brain called the

_______ ______ when damaged can cause emotional dysregulation, impulsivity, impaired decision making, and a lack of motivation.

what is frontal lobe
400

Imaging approach derived from diffusion tensor imaging data (DTI) has evaluation of the neural tracts in the circuitry underlying emotion regulation

What is Diffusion Tensor Tactography (DTT)

400

we see a stimulus, have a physiological response, and simultaneously appraise the situation, meaning identifying and assessing the stimulus, which causes us to feel an emotion. 

What is the The Schachter-Singer (or Two Factor) Theory

400

Social effect of emotional dysregulation

What is Interpersonal conflict

400

a chemical substance that is released at the end of a nerve fiber by the arrival of a nerve impulse and, by diffusing across the synapse or junction, causes the transfer of the impulse to another nerve fiber, a muscle fiber, or some other structure

What are Neurotransmitters

500

difficulty in regulating emotions. It can manifest in several ways, such as feeling overwhelmed by seemingly minor things, struggling to control impulsive behaviors, or having unpredictable outbursts

What is emotional dysregulation

500

What are the 5 key structures in the brain? 

what is orbital prefrontal cortex, ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, amygdala, and anterior cingulate cortex

500

See Stimulus→ Cognitive Appraisal→ Feeling Emotion→Physical Response

What is The  Lazarus’s Cognitive Mediational Theory

500

Causes disruption in the prefrontal area of the brain and leads to unwanted thoughts and feelings

What is OCD

500

 deterioration and loss of function in the cells of a tissue or organ

What is degeneration?