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Related Concept Videos

Frustration and Conflict: Approach-Approach, Approach-Avoidance01:20

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Frustration occurs when people are obstructed or prevented from achieving a desired goal or fulfilling a perceived need. For example, when someone's input is ignored in a discussion, it can lead to feelings of frustration. Conflict, however, arises from opposing interests, goals, or actions. Conflicts can take various forms based on the nature of these opposing desires or goals.
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Frustration and Conflict: Avoidance-Avoidance, Double-Approach Avoidance01:14

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Avoidance-avoidance conflict refers to a psychological situation where a person must choose between two or more unpleasant alternatives. These conflicts are particularly stressful because neither option is desirable. This dilemma is often expressed in sayings like "caught between a rock and a hard place" or "between the devil and the deep blue sea." For instance, individuals who fear dental procedures may find themselves torn between enduring a painful toothache or facing the...
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Emotion-focused coping refers to a set of strategies aimed at managing the emotional impact of stressors, rather than directly addressing their causes. This approach involves altering one's emotional response to stressful situations to reduce their psychological effects. For example, individuals might talk with a friend or engage in activities like journaling to express their feelings. Such actions can help achieve emotional clarity or release, providing the psychological stability needed...
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Coping strategies are methods people use to manage, tolerate, or reduce the effects of stressors. These strategies involve both behavioral and psychological actions to handle stressful situations. One common approach is problem-focused coping, which aims to change or eliminate the source of stress rather than merely addressing its consequences. This method involves taking direct action to resolve the issue causing stress.
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Regular exercise and meditation serve as essential tools in managing stress and promoting physical and mental well-being.
The Role of Exercise in Stress Management
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One influential perspective on what motivates people's behavior is detailed in Tory Higgin's self-discrepancy theory (Higgins, 1987). He proposed that people hold disagreeing internal representations of themselves that lead to different emotional states.  
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Nov 5, 2025

A Modified Lean and Release Technique to Emphasize Response Inhibition and Action Selection in Reactive Balance
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Mindfulness and equanimity moderate approach/avoidance motor responses.

Catherine Juneau1, Rebecca Shankland2, Bärbel Knäuper3

  • 1Université Clermont Auvergne, LAPSCO, Clermont-Ferrand, France.

Cognition & Emotion
|May 19, 2021
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Mindfulness meditation, specifically breathing exercises, and trait equanimity can reduce automatic approach and avoidance tendencies toward stimuli. These practices may help decrease biased responses to pleasant and unpleasant cues.

Keywords:
Approach/avoidance taskequanimityhedonic evaluationmindfulness

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Area of Science:

  • Psychology
  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Mindfulness Studies

Background:

  • Basic psychological tendency to approach pleasant and avoid unpleasant stimuli.
  • Motivational processes underlying approach-avoidance behavior.
  • Potential role of mindfulness and equanimity in modulating these tendencies.

Purpose of the Study:

  • Investigate if mindfulness practices and trait equanimity can attenuate approach-avoidance motivational processes.
  • Examine the impact of breathing meditation, body-scan meditation, and trait equanimity on the Approach/Avoidance Task (AAT).

Main Methods:

  • Two studies utilizing the Approach/Avoidance Task (AAT).
  • Study 1: Randomized controlled trial with breathing meditation, body-scan meditation, and active control groups.
  • Study 2: Comparison of motor responses based on participants' trait equanimity levels (low vs. high).

Main Results:

  • Breathing meditation practice significantly moderated motor responses in the AAT.
  • Higher trait equanimity was associated with moderated motor responses in the AAT.
  • Body-scan meditation did not show a significant moderating effect.
  • Bayesian analyses confirmed reduced bias in motor responses for breathing meditation and high equanimity groups.

Conclusions:

  • Breathing meditation and trait equanimity can decrease automatic motivational approach and avoidance tendencies.
  • Mindfulness practices and dispositional equanimity may offer a pathway to modulate responses to positive and negative stimuli.
  • Findings highlight the potential of specific mindfulness techniques in altering fundamental motivational biases.