
Affective experience is often assumed to be synonymous with conscious feeling. When individuals report sadness, anxiety, or anger, these states are typically understood as subjective, accessible, and identifiable. Yet a...

Affective experience is often assumed to be synonymous with conscious feeling. When individuals report sadness, anxiety, or anger, these states are typically understood as subjective, accessible, and identifiable. Yet a...

Psychosomatic theory attempts to explain how subjective emotional experiences are translated into measurable physiological phenomena. At the core of this inquiry lies a central problem: emotional states are abstract, internally...

Stress is often described in psychological terms—as pressure, tension, or emotional strain arising from perceived demands. Yet its effects extend far beyond subjective experience. Stress is a whole-body phenomenon, involving...

The relationship between mind and body has long occupied a central place in both medicine and psychology. Traditionally, physical symptoms were understood as the direct consequence of biological dysfunction, while...

Perception is commonly treated as a transparent window onto the external world. Individuals assume that what they see, hear, and feel corresponds—at least approximately—to objective reality. Yet contemporary psychology and...

Memory is often treated as the backbone of identity. The ability to recall past experiences, recognize familiar people, and construct a personal narrative appears inseparable from the sense of who...

The intuition that there exists a stable, enduring self at the center of experience is among the most deeply ingrained assumptions of human cognition. Individuals typically perceive themselves as unified...

Consciousness is often described as the capacity to be aware of experience—of sensations, thoughts, emotions, and the surrounding world. Yet one of its most enigmatic features lies in its reflexivity:...

The human mind possesses an extraordinary capacity for reflection. Unlike many other systems in nature, it can turn inward, observe its own processes, question its own thoughts, and evaluate its...

Identity is often experienced as something stable, continuous, and deeply personal—a sense of “I” that persists across time, situations, and relationships. Yet this apparent stability is not absolute. In psychiatric...
Role conflict occurs when an individual faces incompatible demands attached to different social roles they occupy. Each person plays multiple roles—such as employee, parent, partner, student, friend—and these roles come with specific expectations and responsibilities. When these expectations clash, they create psychological tension and stress.
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