Mood Disorder Specialists Portsmouth VA

A positive mood is more expansive, sees the larger picture and tends to make more associations. Sad people, on the other hand, tend to stick to the facts, pay attention to details, and use more item'specific processing.

Bon Secours Maryview Behavorial Medicine Services
(757) 398-2367
3636 High St
Portsmouth, VA
Industry
Mental Health Professional, Physical Therapist

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Belina Rowena Alfonso
(757) 953-5269
620 John Paul Jones Cir
Portsmouth, VA
Specialty
Psychiatry

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A A & G Group Home Llc
(757) 337-0375
2125 Jefferson St
Portsmouth, VA
Industry
Mental Health Professional

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Brian Dennis Smullen
(757) 953-4915
620 John Paul Jones Cir
Portsmouth, VA
Specialty
Psychiatry

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Michael McClam
(757) 953-7889
620 John Paul Jones Cir
Portsmouth, VA
Specialty
Psychiatry

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Dietrich Schelzig
(757) 953-5269
620 John Paul Jones Cir
Portsmouth, VA
Specialty
Psychiatry

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Kevin Michael Nasky
(757) 953-4890
620 John Paul Jones Cir
Portsmouth, VA
Specialty
Psychiatry

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Abs
(757) 393-6638
231 Hatton St
Portsmouth, VA
Industry
Mental Health Professional

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Alfonso Lopez-Cardonce
(757) 391-6751
825 Crawford Pkwy
Portsmouth, VA
Specialty
Child Psychiatry

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Steve Johnson Brasington
(757) 953-7374
620 John Paul Jones Cir
Portsmouth, VA
Specialty
Child Psychiatry

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The Upside of Sadness

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Have trouble remembering things? Maybe you’re just too happy. A recent University of Virginia study found that sad people remembered words more accurately than those who are lovin’ life. The study tested 100 undergraduates who were exposed to two different mood-inducing classical music selections to evoke either happiness (Mozart) or sadness (Mahler).

Once their moods had been altered, the students were shown lists of words that they were then asked to recall. The researchers found that subjects who were feeling cheerier were more likely to lapse into “relational processing,” which means that as they listened they made associations with the words and thought about bigger issues rather than the specifics of the task. Consequently this group’s test scores were lower than their gloomier compatriots.

“A positive mood is more expansive, sees the larger picture and tends to make more associations,” says study author Justin Storbeck. “Sad people, on the other hand, tend to stick to the facts, pay attention to details, and use more item-specific processing.”

The study even puts a positive spin on sadness. “We used to think about negative emotions as being dysfunctional,” says Storbeck, “but sometimes they can be beneficial, depending on the task.”

Elizabeth Marglin

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