Template:Emotional Intelligence/glossary: Difference between revisions
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Created page with "<includeonly> {{#switch: {{{1|}}} | Alexander Stevens = Psychology researcher; coauthored meta-experience of mood with John D. Mayer | American Heritage School = Private college-preparatory school in Plantation, Florida | amygdala = Brain region central to fear learning and rapid emotional responses | amygdala hijack = Sudden limbic takeover producing impulsive reactions | Anger Coping = School-based program teaching anger management and problem-solving skills | An..." |
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| adrenal glands = Endocrine organs atop kidneys; release hormones including adrenaline and cortisol
| adrenaline = Hormone epinephrine; triggers fight-or-flight responses▼
| Alexander Stevens = Psychology researcher; coauthored meta-experience of mood with John D. Mayer
| alexithymia = Difficulty identifying and describing emotions; psychiatric construct; emotion awareness deficit
| alexithymic = Having reduced ability to identify or describe emotions; clinical adjective
| American Heritage School = Private college-preparatory school in Plantation, Florida
| amygdala = Brain region central to fear learning and rapid emotional responses
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| Carnegie Mellon University = American research university in Pittsburgh
| Carol Kusché = Psychologist; co-developer of PATHS curriculum
| Carole Hooven = Psychologist; collaborator in meta-emotion research with John Gottman
| CASEL = Collaborative for Academic, Social, and Emotional Learning; SEL advocacy group
| catharsis = Release of pent-up emotion through expression; psychological theory; debated effectiveness
| Center for Neural Science = NYU neuroscience department researching brain and behavior
| Charles Darwin = English naturalist; wrote The Expression of the Emotions
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| Coral Springs, Florida = Florida city; location of J. P. Taravella High School
| cortisol = Stress hormone released by the adrenal cortex
| cytology = Study of cells for diagnosis; laboratory analysis of cellular samples
| Daniel Goleman = American psychologist and author; popularized emotional intelligence
| David Barlow = Clinical psychologist; anxiety treatment and exposure therapy researcher
| David Dinkins = American politician; former New York City mayor mentioned in school shooting context
| David Pologruto = Florida high school physics teacher in 1990 stabbing case
| Diana Baumrind = Developmental psychologist; parenting styles researcher
| Diane Tice = Social psychologist; studied self-control and mood regulation with Roy Baumeister
| Dolf Zillmann = Communications scholar; excitation transfer and aggression researcher
| Duke University = American research university in Durham, North Carolina
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| Ed Diener = Psychologist; pioneer of subjective well-being research
| EEG = Electroencephalography; technique recording brain electrical activity
| emotion coaching = Parenting approach; adults name feelings, set limits, teach problem-solving
| emotional contagion = Spread of emotion between people via nonverbal cues
| emotional labor = Management of feelings for wages; workplace display rules
| emotional memory = Memory tagged with affect that guides rapid appraisal
| executive control = Prefrontal cognitive control of attention, impulses, and goal-directed behavior
| flow = Psychology state of deep absorption when challenge matches skill
| Frank Bernieri = Social psychologist; studied nonverbal coordination and rapport
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| Harvard University = American Ivy League research university in Cambridge, Massachusetts
| Hillsborough, California = Town in San Mateo County; site of Nueva Learning Center
| hormone = Chemical messenger secreted by glands that regulates physiological processes
| hypothalamus = Brain region coordinating endocrine and autonomic responses▼
| Ian Moore = Student victim in 1992 Thomas Jefferson High School shooting
| IQ = Intelligence quotient; standardized cognitive ability metric
| J. P. Taravella High School = Public high school in Coral Springs, Florida
| Jerome Kagan = Developmental psychologist; temperament research on inhibited and uninhibited infants
| John Barefoot = Psychologist; linked hostility with coronary disease severity
| John Cacioppo = Social neuroscientist; studied emotional synchrony and nonverbal coordination
| John D. Mayer = American psychologist; co-originator of emotional intelligence construct
| John Gottman = Psychologist; marital stability and divorce prediction researcher
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| Khalil Sumpter = Student shooter in 1992 East New York case
| Kirkus Reviews = American book review magazine
| Lenore Terr = Child psychiatrist; documented Chowchilla kidnapping survivors’ trauma and recovery
| limbic signals = Rapid affective cues generated by limbic circuits guiding quick appraisal
| limbic system = Midbrain network generating rapid emotional responses
| limbic urgency = Intense limbic arousal that narrows attention and pushes rapid reactions
| Lizabeth Roemer = Clinical psychologist; worry and anxiety research
| locus coeruleus = Brainstem nucleus releasing norepinephrine during arousal
| Mark Greenberg = Psychologist; co-creator of PATHS program
| meta-emotion = Beliefs and attitudes about emotions; family-level patterns guiding responses
| meta-experience = Awareness of one’s own moods and feelings; metacognitive emotional process
| Merve Emre = Literary critic; wrote cultural critique of emotional intelligence
| motor mimicry = Automatic imitation of others’ expressions or movements; early empathy mechanism
| neocortex = Brain’s outer layer responsible for higher cognition
| neuroscience = Scientific study of the nervous system; brain and behavior disciplines
| New Haven = Connecticut city; site of districtwide Social Development program
| New York City = Largest city in the United States
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| New York University = Private research university in New York City
| norepinephrine = Neurotransmitter and hormone involved in arousal and stress
| Nueva Learning Center = Private school in Hillsborough, California; site of Self Science classes
| PATHS (Promoting Alternative Thinking Strategies) = School curriculum for social-emotional learning
| Paul Ekman = Psychologist; facial expressions and cultural display rules researcher
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| Portland, Oregon = Oregon city; site of 1978 aircraft crash case
| prefrontal cortex = Frontal brain region for executive control and regulation
| Profile of Nonverbal Sensitivity = Nonverbal emotion recognition test developed by Robert Rosenthal
| psychoneuroimmunology = Field studying interactions among mind, brain, and immune system
| Publishers Weekly = American book trade magazine
| Randy Larsen = Psychologist; researched affect intensity and daily mood balance
| Redford Williams = Cardiologist and behavioral medicine researcher
| Resolving Conflict Creatively Program = School program for mediation and de-escalation training
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| Roy Baumeister = Social psychologist; self-control and motivation research
| SAT = Standardized test for U.S. college admissions
| SEL = Social and Emotional Learning; schoolwide instruction in emotional and social skills
| Self Science = Classroom curriculum teaching emotional skills
| Sheldon Cohen = Psychologist; stress and susceptibility to colds research
| Shoshona Zuboff = Scholar of organizations and information technology; workplace change analyst
| Social Development program = Districtwide K–12 social-emotional learning program in New Haven
| somatic markers = Emotion-linked bodily signals guiding decision making in uncertain situations
| Stanford University = American research university in Stanford, California
| Susan Nolen-Hoeksema = Psychologist; research on rumination and depression
| Temple University = Public research university in Philadelphia
| thalamus = Brain relay center routing sensory signals to cortical and subcortical regions
| The Emotional Brain = Part heading in Goleman’s book covering brain foundations
| The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals = 1872 book by Charles Darwin
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| Time = American news magazine
| Tyrone Sinkler = Student victim in 1992 East New York shooting
| University of Alabama = Public research university in Tuscaloosa, Alabama
| University of Iowa = American public research university in Iowa City
| University of New Hampshire = Public research university in Durham, New Hampshire
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| Ulf Dimberg = Psychophysiologist; facial EMG mimicry research
| USA Today = American daily newspaper
| valedictorian = Top-performing graduating student honored for highest academic achievement
| ventromedial prefrontal damage = Injury to ventromedial prefrontal cortex impairing judgment and decision making
| Walter Mischel = Psychologist; delay of gratification studies
| What Makes a Leader? = Influential Harvard Business Review article by Daniel Goleman
| Yale University = American Ivy League research university in New Haven
▲ | adrenaline = Hormone epinephrine; triggers fight-or-flight responses
▲ | hypothalamus = Brain region coordinating endocrine and autonomic responses
| #default = Hi reader, have a great day! 😎
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