affect+by+intensity

  • 1affect —    by Felicity J.Colman   Watch me: affection is the intensity of colour in a sunset on a dry and cold autumn evening. Kiss me: affect is that indescribable moment before the registration of the audible, visual, and tactile transformations… …

    The Deleuze dictionary

  • 2affect —    by Felicity J.Colman   Watch me: affection is the intensity of colour in a sunset on a dry and cold autumn evening. Kiss me: affect is that indescribable moment before the registration of the audible, visual, and tactile transformations… …

    The Deleuze dictionary

  • 3intensity —    by Constantin V.Boundas    Intensity is a key notion in Deleuze s philosophical project: it manifests itself as the intensive virtual of his ontology; as the affirmative and creative desire of his ethics and politics; as the affect of his… …

    The Deleuze dictionary

  • 4intensity —    by Constantin V.Boundas    Intensity is a key notion in Deleuze s philosophical project: it manifests itself as the intensive virtual of his ontology; as the affirmative and creative desire of his ethics and politics; as the affect of his… …

    The Deleuze dictionary

  • 5Affect (psychology) — Affective redirects here. For other uses, see Affect (disambiguation). Affect refers to the experience of feeling or emotion.[1] Affect is a key part of the process of an organism s interaction with stimuli. The word also refers sometimes to… …

    Wikipedia

  • 6Affect display — In psychology, affect display or affective display is a subject s externally displayed affect. The display can be by facial, vocal, or gestural means (APA 2006, p. 26). When displayed affect is different from the subjective affect, it is… …

    Wikipedia

  • 7Affect theory — In psychology, affect is an emotion or subjectively experienced feeling. Affect theory is a branch of psychoanalysis that attempts to organize affects into discrete categories and connect each one with its typical response. So, for example, the… …

    Wikipedia

  • 8affect — n. (in psychiatry) 1) the predominant emotion in a person s mental state at a particular moment. Blunted affect is a diminished intensity of emotional response; it is a feature of some forms of chronic schizophrenia and depression. 2) the emotion …

    The new mediacal dictionary

  • 9Blunted affect — is the scientific term describing a lack of emotional reactivity on the part of an individual. The precise boundary between the generally positive personality trait serious and the generally pathological blunted affect is impossible to describe… …

    Wikipedia

  • 10Tornado intensity and damage — Tornadoes vary in intensity regardless of shape, size, and location. While strong tornadoes are typically larger than weak tornadoes, there are several instances of F5 tornadoes with damage paths less than 500 feet (150 m) wide. Data from the… …

    Wikipedia