US /əˈfɛktɪv/
・UK /əˈfektɪv/
[4. Positive affective presence]
Having positive affective presence
A 2016 study published in the journal "Proceeding, the National Academy of Sciences" examined whether people are attracted to others whose affective behavior they can easily understand.
And honestly, sometimes doctors will treat SAD or seasonal affective disorders and other conditions related to things like depression with more sunlight.
Hedy Kober, Director of Yale's Clinical and Affective Neuroscience Lab, who also co-authored a 2016 research review on how we respond to food says, "Food cues. They make you eat more."
However, a study peer reviewed in the journal of affective disorders found a potential link between temperament and which seasons of the year you are born in.
Verywell Mind author Kendra Cherry says psychologists have known for a long time that the seasons can influence our moods such as with seasonal affective disorder in the winter months.
Seasonal affective disorder.
and people who are affected by seasonal affective disorder tend to make more risk-averse decisions with their money during the winter months than they do during the summer months.
And people who are affected by seasonal affective disorder
Affective labeling means labeling your emotions.
It's really just about picking a word to describe your current emotion, and if you can't find the right word, there is research showing that describing a landscape is also a great way to practice affective labeling.
It's very affective.
affective flirting and doctor Monica Moore doctor Monica more from Webster
there are guidelines to touching and there's affective tone yeah I don't know