Using the Circumplex Model of Emotion, name any emotion that would be rated as high in arousal and positive.
Possible Answers: Excited, Ecstatic, Alert, Elated, Happy, Jubilant, etc.
This behavior pattern, which is thought to be associated with cardiovascular disease, includes competitiveness, achievement-striving, impatience, hostility, and vigorous speech.
Type A Behavior Pattern
This source of stress is part of everyday life and tends to be most strongly associated with health outcomes.
Daily Hassles
This aspect of child-caregiver relationships can be categorized as secure, insecure avoidant, insecure anxious/resistant, and insecure disorganized.
Attachment Style
This profession is at increased risk for mental health consequences due to feelings of obligation to continue working long hours, personal and family safety concerns, and exposure to death at work.
Health Care Workers
Anger, fear, sadness, disgust, and happiness are examples of this kind of evolutionarily adaptive and cross-cultural emotion.
Primary Emotions
This aspect of the Type A behavior pattern is most strongly associated with cardiovascular disease.
Hostility
This simple intervention may be the key ingredient in other behavioral stress interventions.
Relaxation Training
These two aspects of interpersonal style are associated with worse health outcomes.
Hostility and Dominance
This political orientation is associated with less perceived risk, less adherence to guidelines, and less knowledge about COVID-19.
Republican
This type of coping is oriented toward changing the source of the emotions and is generally associated with good health.
Problem-Focused Coping
This Big 5 personality trait is associated with excessive somatic complaints in the absence of physical illness.
Neuroticism
Stress is associated with the shortening of these protective caps on the end of chromosomes.
Telomeres
This hormone increases in early-stage romantic love, but decreases in long-term relationships and after physical intimacy.
Cortisol
This behavior has increased during the pandemic due to increased household stress, more time spent at home, and the disruption of social and protective networks.
Intimate Partner Violence
This emotion is the strongest predictor of increased detection and screening behaviors, including higher frequency of cancer screening.
Fear/Anxiety
Extraversion/introversion, emotionality, and psychoticism are the three traits in this theory of personality.
Eysenck's Trait Theory
Diseases of adaptation occur during this stage of Seyle's General Adaptation Syndrome, when the person adapts to an ongoing stressor.
Resistance
This type of social support has the weakest relationship with health, and is sometimes positive but sometimes negative.
Received Support
This personality trait is associated with greater adherence to COVID-19 guidelines because of increased concern for others.
Agreeableness
Emotional disclosure requires this skill which differentiates it from emotional expression.
Self-Reflection/Transfer of Emotions into Language
Exposure, reactivity, recovery, and restoration are the four aspects of this theory of how personality influences health.
Stress Moderation Theory
This physiological response occurs when the adrenal glands secrete norepinephrine and epinephrine in response to sympathetic nervous system activation.
Adrenomedullary Response
This attitude of hostility, criticism, and overinvolvement expressed within a family has been implicated in a wide range of mental health problems, asthma, and poor epilepsy control.
Expressed Emotion
This aspect of the pandemic is likely to have long-lasting effects on children's executive function, social cognition, emotion processing, mental health, and motor development.
Social Isolation/Deprivation