4 found
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  1.  11
    Intensified Job Demands and Cognitive Stress Symptoms: The Moderator Role of Individual Characteristics.Johanna Rantanen, Pessi Lyyra, Taru Feldt, Mikko Villi & Tiina Parviainen - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Intensified job demands originate in the general accelerated pace of society and ever-changing working conditions, which subject workers to increasing workloads and deadlines, constant planning and decision-making about one’s job and career, and the continual learning of new professional knowledge and skills. This study investigated how individual characteristics, namely negative and positive affectivity related to competence demands, and multitasking preference moderate the association between IJDs and cognitive stress symptoms among media workers. The results show that although IJDs were associated with (...)
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  2.  6
    Behavioral Inhibition Underlies the Link Between Interoceptive Sensitivity and Anxiety-Related Temperamental Traits.Pessi Lyyra & Tiina Parviainen - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  3.  13
    Dissociable Effects of Reward on P300 and EEG Spectra Under Conditions of High vs. Low Vigilance During a Selective Visual Attention Task.Jia Liu, Chi Zhang, Yongjie Zhu, Yunmeng Liu, Hongjin Sun, Tapani Ristaniemi, Fengyu Cong & Tiina Parviainen - 2020 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 14.
  4.  2
    Neural correlates of emotion-label vs. emotion-laden word processing in late bilinguals: evidence from an ERP study.Dong Tang, Xueqiao Li, Yang Fu, Huili Wang, Xueyan Li, Tiina Parviainen & Tommi Kärkkäinen - forthcoming - Cognition and Emotion.
    The brain processes underlying the distinction between emotion-label words (e.g. happy, sad) and emotion-laden words (e.g. successful, failed) remain inconclusive in bilingualism research. The present study aims to directly compare the processing of these two types of emotion words in both the first language (L1) and second language (L2) by recording event-related potentials (ERP) from late Chinese-English bilinguals during a lexical decision task. The results revealed that in the early word processing stages, the N170 emotion effect emerged only for L1 (...)
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