All Relations between planning and emotion

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Eric B Kevern. Understanding well-being in the evolutionary context of brain development. Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences. vol 359. issue 1449. 2004-11-09. PMID:15347526. indeed, the prefrontal association cortex, areas of the brain concerned with forward planning and regulatory control of emotional behaviour, continue to develop until the age of 20. 2004-11-09 2023-08-12 human
Céline Risterucci, Denise Terramorsi, André Nieoullon, Marianne Amalri. Excitotoxic lesions of the prelimbic-infralimbic areas of the rodent prefrontal cortex disrupt motor preparatory processes. The European journal of neuroscience. vol 17. issue 7. 2003-06-20. PMID:12713653. the medial prefrontal cortex (mpfc) is involved in a variety of cognitive and emotional processes; in rodents its implication in motor planning is less known, however. 2003-06-20 2023-08-12 human
B Taylo. Promoting self-help strategies by sharing the lived experience of arthritis. Contemporary nurse. vol 10. issue 1-2. 2002-05-10. PMID:11855014. strategies were offered for managing mornings, ensuring personal comfort, keeping a positive attitude, doing housework, cooking and meals, getting exercise, existing in day-to-day life, living at a slower pace, acknowledging feelings, dealing with depression, trying alternative treatments, accepting illness, getting sleep and rest, getting help, using help and handy gadgets, having emotional support, having determination, managing pain relief using distractions, making adjustments, planning ahead, maintaining independence, having a social life, managing stress, adapting around young children, and facilitating self-awareness. 2002-05-10 2023-08-12 Not clear
J Barrash, D Tranel, S W Anderso. Acquired personality disturbances associated with bilateral damage to the ventromedial prefrontal region. Developmental neuropsychology. vol 18. issue 3. 2001-10-18. PMID:11385830. pf-bvm participants showed a higher rate of acquired disturbances than npf participants in blunted emotional experience, apathy, low emotional expressiveness, inappropriate affect, poor frustration tolerance, irritability, lability, indecisiveness, poor judgment, social inappropriateness, lack of planning, lack of initiation and persistence, and lack of insight. 2001-10-18 2023-08-12 human
K Semendeferi, H Damasio, R Frank, G W Van Hoese. The evolution of the frontal lobes: a volumetric analysis based on three-dimensional reconstructions of magnetic resonance scans of human and ape brains. Journal of human evolution. vol 32. issue 4. 1997-06-13. PMID:9085187. the frontal lobe is involved in functions such as creative thinking, planning of future actions, decision making, artistic expression, aspects of emotional behavior, as well as working memory, language and motor control. 1997-06-13 2023-08-12 human
P A Shuler, L Gelberg, J E Davi. Characteristics associated with the risk of unintended pregnancy among urban homeless women: use of the Shuler Nurse Practitioner Practice Model in research. Journal of the American Academy of Nurse Practitioners. vol 7. issue 1. 1995-06-15. PMID:7742062. those women who were least likely to use a birth control method in this study were black, used cocaine daily, had multiple sources of emotional support, were satisfied with their sex lives, and reported access problems to family planning services (p < or = .05). 1995-06-15 2023-08-12 Not clear
J Yager, M Rorty, E Rossott. Coping styles differ between recovered and nonrecovered women with bulimia nervosa, but not between recovered women and non-eating-disordered control subjects. The Journal of nervous and mental disease. vol 183. issue 2. 1995-03-07. PMID:7844582. using a 60-item self-report measure, we found that women with active bulimia nervosa were less likely than the other two groups to utilize active coping, planning, and seeking emotional support, and less likely than the recovering bulimia nervosa group to focus on and vent emotions. 1995-03-07 2023-08-12 human
H C Leiner, A L Leiner, R S Do. Reappraising the cerebellum: what does the hindbrain contribute to the forebrain? Behavioral neuroscience. vol 103. issue 5. 1989-12-19. PMID:2679667. although the cerebellum has traditionally been regarded as a motor mechanism, recent behavioral evidence indicates that the human cerebellum is involved in a wider range of functions: in learning, in planning, in judging time, in some emotional and cognitive disorders such as autism, and in some normal mental activities such as the cognitive processing of words. 1989-12-19 2023-08-11 human
E E Gotts, W P Liemoh. Behavioral characteristics of three children with the broad thumb-hallux (Rubinstein-Taybi) syndrome. Biological psychiatry. vol 12. issue 3. 1977-08-12. PMID:871491. a number of mutual, behavioral resemblances of the three r-t children to each other were found to be absent or less prominent in the comparison group; these included: (i) the r-t children were more emotional and excitable; (ii) more often had nightmares and engaged in self-stimulation; (iii) had greater difficulty getting over anger (pouted); (iv) were friendly and more readily accepted social contacts; (v) had short attention span; and (vi) experienced more difficulty in planning motor acts, and in executing locomotor and oculomotor skills. 1977-08-12 2023-08-11 Not clear