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Ellen Bratslavsky
Researcher at Case Western Reserve University
Publications - 8
Citations - 11641
Ellen Bratslavsky is an academic researcher from Case Western Reserve University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Emotion work & Ego depletion. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 8 publications receiving 10467 citations. Previous affiliations of Ellen Bratslavsky include Ohio State University.
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Bad is Stronger than Good
TL;DR: The authors found that bad is stronger than good, as a general principle across a broad range of psychological phenomena, such as bad emotions, bad parents, bad feedback, and bad information is processed more thoroughly than good.
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Ego depletion: is the active self a limited resource?
TL;DR: The results suggest that the self's capacity for active volition is limited and that a range of seemingly different, unrelated acts share a common resource.
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Emotional distress regulation takes precedence over impulse control : If you feel bad, do it!
TL;DR: Three experiments found that believing that one's bad mood was frozen (unchangeable) eliminated the tendency to eat fattening snacks, seek immediate gratification, and engage in frivolous procrastination during emotional distress.
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Giving in to Feel Good: The Place of Emotion Regulation in the Context of General Self-Control
Dianne M. Tice,Ellen Bratslavsky +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on emotion regulation, which is a special case of self-regulation in that it can often undermine attempts at other kinds of self control, such as dieting and abstaining from smoking, drugs, alcohol, ill-advised sexual encounters, gambling, and procrastination.
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Passion, Intimacy, and Time: Passionate Love as a Function of Change in Intimacy
TL;DR: It is proposed that passion is a function of change in intimacy (i.e., the first derivative of intimacy overtime), which is able to account for a broad range of evidence, including frequency of sex in long-term relationships, intimate and sexual behavior of extraverts, gender differences in intimate behavior, gain and loss effects of communicated attraction.