Kikelj, Naja
Vztrajanje v neaktivnosti pri odločanju je pojav, pri katerem nekoriščenje privlačne priložnosti zniža verjetnost koriščenja podobne, a slabše priložnosti v prihodnosti, čeprav je ta še vedno objektivno ugodna. Raziskave, ki so preučevale vzroke vztrajanja v neaktivnosti, so prihajale do različnih in včasih nasprotujočih si zaključkov. Namen razisk...
Sangha, Roopina Bossick, Andrew Su, Wan-Ting K. Coleman, Chad Chavali, Neha Wegienka, Ganesa
Published in
Journal of Patient-Centered Research and Reviews
Purpose This study sought to identify patterns of self-reported regret after hysterectomy. Methods Women undergoing hysterectomy for a benign indication were recruited in the 2 weeks prior to surgery. Women reported demographics and completed validated questionnaires (Decisional Regret Scale, Patient Health Questionnaire-9, Decisional Conflict Scal...
Liu, Zhiyuan Li, Lin Liu, Sijia Sun, Yubin Li, Shuang Yi, Meng Zheng, Li Guo, Xiuyan
Published in
Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience
The current study investigates how long-term Tai Chi experience affects the neural and emotional response to regret in elders. Participants perform the sequential risk-taking task while undergoing functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scanning. In the task, participants opened a series of boxes consecutively and decided when to stop. Each bo...
Fillon, Adrien Kutscher, Lucas Feldman, Gilad
Published in
Cognition & emotion
Exceptionality effect is the phenomenon that people associate stronger negative affect with a negative outcome when it is a result of an exception (abnormal behaviour) compared to when it is a result of routine (normal behaviour). In this pre-registered meta-analysis, we examined exceptionality effect in 48 studies (N = 4212). An analysis of 35 exp...
Wu, Yin van Dijk, Eric Li, Hong
Published in
Stress (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
Previous research has shown that stress can affect emotion processing in a variety of settings. However, little attention has been paid to the effects of stress on emotional decision-making. The present study addressed this question by exposing healthy young participants either to a stressor (n = 30)-socially evaluated cold pressor task- or a non-s...
Goldstein-Greenwood, Jacob Conway, Paul Summerville, Amy Johnson, Brielle N
Published in
Personality & social psychology bulletin
Sacrificial moral dilemmas, in which opting to kill one person will save multiple others, are definitionally suboptimal: Someone dies either way. Decision-makers, then, may experience regret about these decisions. Past research distinguishes affective regret, negative feelings about a decision, from cognitive regret, thoughts about how a decision m...
Adachi, Tomoko Endo, Masayuki Ohashi, Kazutomo
Published in
Nursing open
The aim of this study was to examine regret over the timing of the childbearing decision and reasons for its delay. A cross-sectional study. This cross-sectional study included 219 women and 169 men referred to fertility facilities in Japan from July-December 2018. Participants completed a questionnaire on the reasons for their delay in childbearin...
Saeed, Fahad Ladwig, Susan A Epstein, Ronald M Monk, Rebeca D Duberstein, Paul R
Published in
Clinical journal of the American Society of Nephrology : CJASN
Although some patients regret the decision to start dialysis, modifiable factors associated with regret have rarely been studied. We aimed to identify factors associated with patients' regret to initiate dialysis. A 41-item questionnaire was administered to adult patients receiving maintenance dialysis in seven dialysis units located in Cleveland, ...
Boothe, Brigitte
Published in
Spiritual Care
Opfer von Traumatisierungen sind der Fremdbemächtigung preisgegeben und massiven Beeinträchtigungen ihrer körperlichen, seelischen und sozialen Integrität ausgesetzt. Langfristig gehört zur – häufig nur partiell erfolgreichen – Bewältigung auch die Exploration und Einschätzung des destruktiven Geschehens aus neuer Perspektive im Hier und Jetzt. Per...
Feldman, Gilad
Published in
Cognition & emotion
The widely-replicated action-effect describes a phenomenon in which negative outcomes are associated with higher regret when they are a result of action compared to inaction. The highly influential norm-theory theorised that the effect could be explained using the concept of normality, arguing that inaction is more "normal". I aimed to clarify the ...