Below are the best videos we could find featuring barbara fredrickson about positive psychology.
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Barbara Fredrickson, Boston Universitys 2009-2010 Templeton Fellow, is the Kenan Distinguished Professor of Psychology at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
Special lecture by psychologist Barbara Fredrickson Are the moments of positive interpersonal connection we experience positive health behaviors? Positivity resonance is a momentary affective state co-experienced by two or more people simultaneously, marked by the amplifying trio of: shared...
In this brief interview segment, Megan McDonough, CEO of Wholebeing Institute, and Barbara Fredrickson, director of the PEP Lab at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, discuss the long-term effects of positive emotions in the context of Barbara's "broaden and build" theory.
This is an archive recording from 2010, Guest lecture at Aalto University 21st June 2010.
Barbara Fredrickson suggests that positive emotions make us more resilient to setbacks, improve our relationships, and may even change our biological makeup.
Beyond the fact that feeling good feels good, what is the role of positive emotions? This is a question that psychology has largely ignored throughout its history focusing primarily on psychopathology, on anger, anxiety, sadness and such.
All you need is love. Surveys show that most people consider romantic love to be their primary source of happiness. Barbara Lee Fredrickson, a psychology professor at the University of North Carolina, suggests that love is best defined in terms of small moments of shared positivity.
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What is love? How do positive emotions affect our bodies and minds? Can we actively increase our own and our children's capacity for love? What are the implications for parents and teachers?
Photo Credit: Gabriella Clare Marino / Distributed under the CC BY-SA 4.0 International license