Cognitively Straining Task: Difference between revisions
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=== 2008 === | === 2008 === | ||
* Mauss, Iris B., Silvia A. Bunge, and James J. Gross. | * Mauss, Iris B., Silvia A. Bunge, and James J. Gross. “Culture and automatic emotion regulation." Regulating emotions: Culture, social necessity and biological inheritance (2008): 39-60. | ||
** QUOTE: … and [[cardiovascular response]]s to an [[anger provocation]] ([[Mauss, Evers, Wilhelm, & Gross, 2006]], study 2). As part of this [[anger provocation]], [[participant]]s were instructed by an “[[unfriendly]]” and [[“arrogant” experimenter]] to repeatedly perform a [[boring task|boring]] yet [[Cognitively Straining Task|cognitively straining task]]. … | ** QUOTE: … and [[cardiovascular response]]s to an [[anger provocation]] ([[Mauss, Evers, Wilhelm, & Gross, 2006]], study 2). As part of this [[anger provocation]], [[participant]]s were instructed by an “[[unfriendly]]” and [[“arrogant” experimenter]] to repeatedly perform a [[boring task|boring]] yet [[Cognitively Straining Task|cognitively straining task]]. … | ||
Latest revision as of 04:36, 8 May 2024
A Cognitively Straining Task is a cognitive task that is a straining task (to a cognitive agent).
- …
- Counter-Example(s):
- See: Boring Task, Cognitive Skill.
References
2008
- Mauss, Iris B., Silvia A. Bunge, and James J. Gross. “Culture and automatic emotion regulation." Regulating emotions: Culture, social necessity and biological inheritance (2008): 39-60.
- QUOTE: … and cardiovascular responses to an anger provocation (Mauss, Evers, Wilhelm, & Gross, 2006, study 2). As part of this anger provocation, participants were instructed by an “unfriendly” and “arrogant” experimenter to repeatedly perform a boring yet cognitively straining task. …