F
Frank H. Wilhelm
Researcher at University of Salzburg
Publications - 241
Citations - 14687
Frank H. Wilhelm is an academic researcher from University of Salzburg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anxiety & Panic disorder. The author has an hindex of 57, co-authored 230 publications receiving 13000 citations. Previous affiliations of Frank H. Wilhelm include University of Basel & Stanford University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The social consequences of expressive suppression.
Emily A. Butler,Boris Egloff,Frank H. Wilhelm,Nancy C. Smith,Elizabeth A. Erickson,James J. Gross +5 more
TL;DR: The authors' analysis suggests that expressive suppression should disrupt communication and increase stress levels during social interactions, and this hypothesis was tested in unacquainted pairs of women.
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The tie that binds? Coherence among emotion experience, behavior, and physiology.
TL;DR: Findings provide new evidence about response system coherence in emotions by examining the within-individual associations among experiential, facial behavioral, and peripheral physiological responses during emotional responding and whether emotion intensity moderates these associations.
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Respiratory sinus arrhythmia, emotion, and emotion regulation during social interaction.
TL;DR: Women with higher resting RSA experienced and expressed more negative emotion, and women who attempted to regulate their emotions either by suppressing or reappraising showed larger increases in RSA than controls.
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Fear conditioning in posttraumatic stress disorder: evidence for delayed extinction of autonomic, experiential, and behavioural responses.
TL;DR: There was some evidence that a subgroup of PTSD patients had difficulties in learning the CS-US contingency, thereby providing preliminary evidence of reduced discrimination learning and point to a deficit in extinction learning.
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Cardiovascular, electrodermal, and respiratory response patterns to fear- and sadness-inducing films.
TL;DR: Responses to fear- and sadness-inducing films were assessed using a broad range of cardiovascular and electrodermal measures and facial behavior served as control measures, indicating robust differential physiological response patterns for fear, sadness, and neutral.