Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Fading_affect_bias> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 59 of
59
with 100 triples per page.
- Fading_affect_bias abstract "The fading affect bias, more commonly known as FAB, is a psychological phenomenon in which information regarding negative emotions tends to be forgotten more quickly than that associated with pleasant emotions. Although there have been some contradictory findings regarding the presence of FAB, it has been largely found to be real.".
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageExternalLink remembering-to-forget-autobiographical-memories-ptsd-negative-emotions.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageExternalLink pdf.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageExternalLink walkerskowronski2009.pdf.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageExternalLink The-Fading-Affect-Bias-and-Closure-A-Longitudinal-Study.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageExternalLink 0,8599,1817329,00.html.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageID "37839610".
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageLength "7117".
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageOutDegree "32".
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageRevisionID "622241379".
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Autobiography.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Category:Cognitive_biases.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Category:Memory_biases.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Data.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Depression_(mood).
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Diary.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Electroencephalography.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Emotion.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Experiment.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Gender.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Human.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Interview.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Mental_disorder.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Moderation_(statistics).
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Mood_(psychology).
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Neurological_disorder.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Neuroscience.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Neuroscientist.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Population.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Psychology.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Race_(human_categorization).
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Rat.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Recreational_drug_use.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Retrospective.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Self-image.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Sigmund_Freud.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Socioeconomic_status.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Theory.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Undergraduate_education.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Valence_(psychology).
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink Validity_(statistics).
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLink White_people.
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLinkText "Fading affect bias".
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageWikiLinkText "fading affect bias".
- Fading_affect_bias wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:More_footnotes.
- Fading_affect_bias subject Category:Cognitive_biases.
- Fading_affect_bias subject Category:Memory_biases.
- Fading_affect_bias hypernym Phenomenon.
- Fading_affect_bias type Disease.
- Fading_affect_bias type Type.
- Fading_affect_bias type Concept.
- Fading_affect_bias type Type.
- Fading_affect_bias comment "The fading affect bias, more commonly known as FAB, is a psychological phenomenon in which information regarding negative emotions tends to be forgotten more quickly than that associated with pleasant emotions. Although there have been some contradictory findings regarding the presence of FAB, it has been largely found to be real.".
- Fading_affect_bias label "Fading affect bias".
- Fading_affect_bias sameAs Q17013064.
- Fading_affect_bias sameAs m.0n_gy0_.
- Fading_affect_bias sameAs Q17013064.
- Fading_affect_bias wasDerivedFrom Fading_affect_bias?oldid=622241379.
- Fading_affect_bias isPrimaryTopicOf Fading_affect_bias.