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51. Elasticity of emotions to multiple interpersonal transgressions.

52. Neurophysiological responses to emotional faces predict dynamic fluctuations in affect in adolescents.

53. Anger has benefits for attaining goals.

54. How our ideological out-group shapes our emotional response to our shared socio-political reality.

55. Novel Assessment of the Impact of Irritability on Physiological and Psychological Frustration Responses in Adolescents.

56. Facial emotional congruence in healthy adults and patients suffering from a psychiatric or neurological disorder.

57. The power of personal control: Task choice attenuates the effect of implicit sadness on sympathetically mediated cardiac response.

58. The inner workings of anger: A network analysis of anger and emotion regulation.

59. Personal task choice attenuates implicit happiness effects on effort: A study on cardiovascular response.

60. Induced emotion counter-regulation affects attentional inhibition of emotional information: ERP evidence from a randomized manipulation approach.

61. Measuring facial mimicry: Affdex vs. EMG.

62. Investigating the Role of Anger and Cognitive Malfunction in Mental Health: A Cross-Sectional Exploration Paving the Way for a Subsequent Experiment.

63. Are reactions to frustrative nonreward in other animals a model for human anger? Neurobehavioral implications and therapeutic applications.

64. Perpetrator Perceptions on the Emotions and Motivations Driving Technology-Facilitated Abuse in Relationships: A Story Completion Study.

65. Social processing modulates the initial allocation of attention towards angry faces: evidence from the N2pc component.

66. Can action tendencies be counteracted by inducing incompatible emotions? Considering instances of anxiety and anger.

67. Refining Anger: Summarizing the Self-Report Measurement of Anger.

68. Should perception of emotions be classified according to threat detection rather than emotional valence? An updated meta-analysis for a whole-brain atlas of emotional faces processing.

69. Irritability: A concept analysis.

70. Modulation of emotion-enhanced recollection by gender and task instructions.

71. The Italian adaptation of the Driving Anger Scale (DAS): examining measurement invariance and the role of blaming others as a mediator of the relationship between trait driving anger and aberrant driving behavior.

72. Neural representations of ambiguous affective stimuli and resilience to anxiety in emerging adults.

73. Unconscious and conscious acceptance downregulate aggressive behavior: Mediating role of anger regulation.

74. Towards PPG-based anger detection for emotion regulation.

75. Motivational direction diverges from valence for sadness, anger, and amusement: A role for appraisals?

76. The effect of emotion intensity on time perception: a study with transcranial random noise stimulation.

77. Can personal task choice shield against fear and anger prime effects on effort? A study on cardiac response.

78. Trait Hostility Moderates the Relationships Between Work Environments and Ambulatory Blood Pressure and Momentary Affect.

79. Targeting maladaptive anger with brief therapist-supported internet-delivered emotion regulation treatments: A randomized controlled trial.

80. Anger profiles among individuals seeking treatment for maladaptive anger: Associations with emotion regulation.

81. Expressions of moral disgust reflect both disgust and anger.

82. Personal insult disrupts regulatory brain networks in violent offenders.

83. Behavioural inhibition and early neural processing of happy and angry faces interact to predict anxiety: a longitudinal ERP study.

84. Neuropsychological functions in a pediatric case of partial agenesis of the corpus callosum: Clinical implications.

85. The impact of emotional facial expressions on reflexive attention depends on the aim of dynamic gaze changes: An ERP study.

86. Event-related correlates of compassion for social pain.

87. Impact of facemasks on psychotherapy: Clinician's confidence and emotion recognition.

88. Changes in children's anger, sadness, and persistence across blocked goals: Implications for self-regulation.

89. Implicit angry faces interfere with response inhibition and response adjustment.

90. Angry and happy expressions affect forward gait initiation only when task relevant.

91. Automatic emotion regulation prompts response inhibition to angry faces in sub-clinical depression: An ERP study.

92. What's in a gaze, what's in a face?: The direct gaze effect can be modulated by emotion expression.

93. Loosening the leash: The unique emotional canvas of human screams.

94. Decoding individual differences in expressing and suppressing anger from structural brain networks: A supervised machine learning approach.

95. Exogenous testosterone administration is associated with differential neural response to unfamiliar peer's and own caregiver's voice in transgender adolescents.

96. The angry versus happy recognition advantage: the role of emotional and physical properties.

97. Angry populists or concerned citizens? How linguistic emotion ascriptions shape affective, cognitive, and behavioural responses to political outgroups.

98. Up close and emotional: Electrophysiological dynamics of approaching angry faces.

99. "Anger, embarrassment, less than a woman": the emotional impact of Black women's sexual pain.

100. Context-dependent amygdala-prefrontal connectivity during the dot-probe task varies by irritability and attention bias to angry faces.

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