Emotional
in sentence
1618 examples of Emotional in a sentence
A major challenge of coping with PTSD is sensitivity to triggers, physical and
emotional
stimuli that the brain associates with the original trauma.
These can be everyday sensations that aren’t inherently dangerous but prompt powerful physical and
emotional
reactions.
Charles Darwin theorized that
emotional
expression was a common human feature.
Tomkins claimed that certain affects—
emotional
states and their associated facial expressions— were universal.
Over the next few decades, further research has corroborated Darwin’s idea that some of our most important
emotional
expressions are in fact universal.
There’s still much research to be done in understanding
emotional
expression, particularly as we learn more about the inner workings of the brain.
So I'd like to speak about change, and especially about
emotional
change.
In such a setting, the perpetrator can see, perhaps for the first time, the victim as a real person with thoughts and feelings and a genuine
emotional
response.
Terrorism is something that provokes an
emotional
response that allows people to rationalize authorizing powers and programs that they wouldn't give otherwise.
CA: Snowden said two days ago that terrorism has always been what is called in the intelligence world "a cover for action," that it's something that, because it invokes such a powerful
emotional
response in people, it allows the initiation of these programs to achieve powers that an organization like yours couldn't otherwise have.
It's not well appreciated, but over half of the world's population suffers from some form of cognitive, emotional, sensory or motor condition, and because of poor technology, too often, conditions result in disability and a poorer quality of life.
You don't have an
emotional
sonorousness.
The only thing that it is capable of feeling is the absolute value of this
emotional
equation, the exact distance that you have been flung from yourself.
But there is zero correlation between IQ and
emotional
empathy, feeling with the other person.
One of the other mothers I interviewed when I was working on my book had been raped as an adolescent, and had a child following that rape, which had thrown away her career plans and damaged all of her
emotional
relationships.
Now, the deeper something is etched into your consciousness, the fewer details we need to have an
emotional
reaction.
I hear you and I know that you would want me to be strong, but right now, I am being sucked down, surrounded and suffocated by these raging
emotional
waters, craving to cleanse my soul, trying to emerge on a firm footing one more time, to keep on fighting and flourishing just as you taught me.
Soon enough, after this, I started being invited to give talks to thousands of scientists across the world, but the knowledge about the cloud and saying "Yes, and" just stayed within my own lab, because you see, in science, we don't talk about the process, anything subjective or
emotional.
And she asked, "Why is it that we don't talk about the subjective and
emotional
aspects of doing science?
And when you label something as objective and rational, automatically, the other side, the subjective and emotional, become labeled as non-science or anti-science or threatening to science, and we just don't talk about it.
And so the very next lecture I gave in a conference, I talked about my science, and then I talked about the importance of the subjective and
emotional
aspects of doing science and how we should talk about them, and I looked at the audience, and they were cold.
So everybody starts laughing, starts breathing, notices that there's other scientists around them with shared issues, and we start talking about the
emotional
and subjective things that go on in research.
And scientists have gone on to form peer groups where they meet regularly and create a space to talk about the
emotional
and subjective things that happen as they're mentoring, as they're going into the unknown, and even started courses about the process of doing science, about going into the unknown together, and many other things.
But what impressed me even more was that as I was waiting for my digital I.D., one Googler was telling me about the program that he was about to start to teach the many, many Googlers who practice yoga to become trainers in it, and the other Googler was telling me about the book that he was about to write on the inner search engine, and the ways in which science has empirically shown that sitting still, or meditation, can lead not just to better health or to clearer thinking, but even to
emotional
intelligence.
I don't know if you've noticed, but there's been a spate of books that have come out lately contemplating or speculating on the cognition and
emotional
life of dogs.
One avenue is to appeal to people's
emotional
responses, to appeal to people's empathy, and we often do that through stories.
It's actually a pretty recent phenomenon that we feel that we have to talk to someone to understand their
emotional
distress.
Before the early 20th century, physicians often diagnosed
emotional
distress in their patients just by observation.
We will always be one animal wondering about the
emotional
experience of another animal.
But what's more difficult to navigate is the
emotional
landscape between the generations, and the old adage that with age comes wisdom is not true.
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