stefanopagliari / bibnotes

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highlight (only titles?) omitted in specific context #55

Open Rhydderch opened 2 years ago

Rhydderch commented 2 years ago

Hi!

I found a new bug. It might be related to the setting "placing comment before highlight".

This note in zotero (note that there are comments for each highlight and that there are titles):

Compared to no regulation, expressive suppression leads to decreased positive but not negative emotion experience (Brans, Koval, Verduyn, Lim, & Kuppens, 2013; Gross, 1998a; Gross & Levenson, 1993; 1997; Stepper & Strack, 1993; Strack, Martin, & Stepper, 1988), increased sympathetic nervous system responses (Demaree et al., 2006; Gross, 1998a; Gross & Levenson, 1993, 1997; C. R. Harris, 2001; Richards & Gross, 2000), and greater activation in emotion-generative brain regions such as the amygdala (Goldin et al., 2008). Suppression also leads to worse memory (Johns, Inzlicht, & Schmader, 2008; Richards, Butler, & Gross, 2003; Richards & Gross, 1999, 2000, 2006). In the social domain, suppression leads to lesser liking and greater cardiovascular responses in social interaction partners (Ben-Naim, Hirschberger, Ein-Dor, & Mikulincer, 2013; Butler et al., 2003)”  expressive suppression example

“The Extended Process Model of Emotion Regulation”  ##

“What initiates emotion regulation? What directs specific emotion regulation strategies? And why do some people regulate emotions successfully while others fail to regulate emotions as they should?”  The extended process model of emotion regulation answers these questions

“An Overview of the Extended Process Model”  ###

“The extended process model starts with the idea that emotionslike other types of affect—involve valuation. That is because the defining feature of affect is a “good for” 

results in this in obsidian:

**expressive suppression example**: “Compared to no regulation, expressive suppression leads to decreased positive but not negative emotion experience (Brans, Koval, Verduyn, Lim, & Kuppens, 2013; Gross, 1998a; Gross & Levenson, 1993; 1997; Stepper & Strack, 1993; Strack, Martin, & Stepper, 1988), increased sympathetic nervous system responses (Demaree et al., 2006; Gross, 1998a; Gross & Levenson, 1993, 1997; C. R. Harris, 2001; Richards & Gross, 2000), and greater activation in emotion-generative brain regions such as the amygdala (Goldin et al., 2008). Suppression also leads to worse memory (Johns, Inzlicht, & Schmader, 2008; Richards, Butler, & Gross, 2003; Richards & Gross, 1999, 2000, 2006). In the social domain, suppression leads to lesser liking and greater cardiovascular responses in social interaction partners (Ben-Naim, Hirschberger, Ein-Dor, & Mikulincer, 2013; Butler et al., 2003)” (p. 9)

**The extended process model of emotion regulation answers these questions**: “What initiates emotion regulation? What directs specific emotion regulation strategies? And why do some people regulate emotions successfully while others fail to regulate emotions as they should?” (p. 9)

“The extended process model starts with the idea that emotionslike other types of affect—involve valuation. That is because the defining feature of affect is a “good for me” versus “bad for me” discrimination, and this is what is meant by valuation.” (p. 10)

Let me know if I can provide any further information to help debug this. :)

image version in zotero image

image version in obsidian: image

stefanopagliari commented 2 years ago

Thank you for flagging this problem. I will look into it

stefanopagliari commented 2 years ago

@Rhydderch I realise this is an old issue and apologies for not having tackled it before. I was wondering if the problem still occurs with the latest version. If so, could you please share a json file of this source (rename the extension as txt)?