When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Reverse psychology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reverse_psychology

    Reverse psychology is often used on children due to their high tendency to respond with reactance, a desire to restore threatened freedom of action. Questions have, however been raised about such an approach when it is more than merely instrumental, in the sense that "reverse psychology implies a clever manipulation of the misbehaving child". [5]

  3. Westermarck effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westermarck_effect

    The Westermarck effect, also known as reverse sexual imprinting, is a psychological hypothesis that states that people tend not to be attracted to peers with whom they lived like siblings before the age of six.

  4. Cuckold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuckold

    Psychology regards cuckold fetishism as a variant of masochism, with the cuckold deriving pleasure from being humiliated. [ 30 ] [ 31 ] In his book Masochism and the Self , psychologist Roy Baumeister advanced a Self Theory analysis that cuckolding (or specifically, all masochism) was a form of escaping from self-awareness, at times when self ...

  5. Cuckquean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuckquean

    A cuckquean is the wife of an adulterous husband (or partner for unmarried companions), and the gender-opposite of a cuckold. [1] In evolutionary biology, the term is also applied to females who are investing parental effort in offspring that are not genetically their own.

  6. Reversal theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reversal_theory

    Reversal theory is a structural, phenomenological theory of personality, motivation, and emotion in the field of psychology. [1] It focuses on the dynamic qualities of normal human experience to describe how a person regularly reverses between psychological states, reflecting their motivational style, the meaning they attach to a situation at a given time, and the emotions they experience.

  7. Self-defeating prophecy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-defeating_prophecy

    If the audience of a prediction has an interest in seeing it falsified, and its fulfillment depends on their actions or inaction, their actions upon hearing it will make the prediction less plausible. If a prediction is made with this outcome specifically in mind, it is commonly referred to as reverse psychology or warning. Also, when working ...

  8. Sexual abstinence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sexual_abstinence

    Purity rings are worn by some youth committed to the practice of sexual abstinence. [1]Sexual abstinence or sexual restraint is the practice of refraining from sexual activity for reasons medical, psychological, legal, social, philosophical, moral, religious or other.

  9. Double standard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_standard

    A double standard is the application of different sets of principles for situations that are, in principle, the same. [1] It is often used to describe treatment whereby one group is given more latitude than another. [2]