Focus on Gender IdentityNova Publishers, 2005 - 185 lappuses Gender encompasses biological sex but extends beyond it to the socially prescribed roles deemed appropriate for each sex by the culture in which we live. The gender roles we each carry out are highly individualistic, built on our biological and physical traits, appearance and personality, life experiences such as childhood, career and education, and history of sexual and romantic interactions. Each element influences perceptions and expectations. Gender-related experiences influence and shape the ways we think about others and ourselves including self-image, behaviour, mood, social advancement and coping strategies. This new book brings together leading international research devoted to this subject. |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 62.
. lappuse
... Emotional Stimuli 115 Erzsébet Marosi , Oscar Bazán , Mario Rodríguez , Jorge Bernal , Guillermina Yañez , Belén Prieto and Vicente Guerrero Chapter 7 Psychological Androgyny and Coping Flexibility : Do Androgynous Individuals Cope with ...
... Emotional Stimuli 115 Erzsébet Marosi , Oscar Bazán , Mario Rodríguez , Jorge Bernal , Guillermina Yañez , Belén Prieto and Vicente Guerrero Chapter 7 Psychological Androgyny and Coping Flexibility : Do Androgynous Individuals Cope with ...
. lappuse
... emotional stimuli . It was carried out with 80 university student of 20-25 years old ( 40 men and 40 women ) . Sentences with positive , negative emotions and neutral content were used as stimuli . Changes are inevitable in daily life ...
... emotional stimuli . It was carried out with 80 university student of 20-25 years old ( 40 men and 40 women ) . Sentences with positive , negative emotions and neutral content were used as stimuli . Changes are inevitable in daily life ...
4. lappuse
... emotional upheaval often experienced during this transition period means that some degree of psychological disturbance is normal . Moreover , behaviour considered unacceptable , such as rebelliousness , defiance , moodiness , and ...
... emotional upheaval often experienced during this transition period means that some degree of psychological disturbance is normal . Moreover , behaviour considered unacceptable , such as rebelliousness , defiance , moodiness , and ...
5. lappuse
... emotional , characterised in psychoanalytic terms , by the return of pre - latency fantasy , the decline of the structure of latency , and a shift from a dependence on a reality defined by the parental environment to one can feel to one ...
... emotional , characterised in psychoanalytic terms , by the return of pre - latency fantasy , the decline of the structure of latency , and a shift from a dependence on a reality defined by the parental environment to one can feel to one ...
7. lappuse
... emotional upheaval had began to seem to researchers to be an essential part of a normal adolescence . Anna Freud ( 1958 ) had even suggested that the absence of the emotional upheaval might signal a developmental delay resulting from ...
... emotional upheaval had began to seem to researchers to be an essential part of a normal adolescence . Anna Freud ( 1958 ) had even suggested that the absence of the emotional upheaval might signal a developmental delay resulting from ...
Saturs
1 | |
Gender Differences in Personality Across Three Age Groups A Comparison Based on SelfRatings on the Polish Adjective List | 45 |
Gender Differences in Type A Behavior Patterns Social Support and the Causal Relationship Between them in a Japanese Sample | 59 |
The Creative Personality in a Gender Perspective | 81 |
Mapping Transdisciplinarity in Human Sciences | 95 |
Gender Differences in EEG Narrow Band Spectral Measurements to Emotional Stimuli | 115 |
Psychological Androgyny and Coping Flexibility Do Androgynous Individuals Cope with Life Changes More Flexibly? | 143 |
Index | 183 |
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
activity adaptive adjustment adolescents adults ANACLITIC analysis approach aspects associated attachment band behavior boys brain causes changes characteristics cognitive compared consistent construct coping coping flexibility coping strategies coping style creative cultural depression described disorders effect emotional entered et al examined experience factors feelings females Figure findings flexibility functional gender differences girls higher human important indicating individuals influence internal INTROJECTIVE IPPA-PE Japanese Journal less levels males masculine measures mediating mother nature negative neutral parents participants pattern PCARE peer perceived personality positive possible predicted predictor present Press problems psychological questions reference region regression equation relationship relatively reported responses role satisfaction scale Science scores SEP-IND separation sexual showed significant simultaneously situations social support stressful structure subjects suggested Sumi symptoms Table tasks tend theory Type University variable women York
Populāri fragmenti
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