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Dive into the research topics where Rakesh Pandey is active.

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Featured researches published by Rakesh Pandey.


Journal of Clinical Psychology | 1996

Cross-cultural alexithymia: Development and validation of a Hindi translation of the 20-item Toronto alexithymia scale

Rakesh Pandey; Manas K. Mandal; Graeme J. Taylor; James D. A. Parker

The possibility that alexithymia may be a culture-bound construct was evaluated by developing a Hindi version of the Twenty-Item Toronto Alexithymia Scale and assessing its psychometric properties in a sample of 285 normal young adults in India. The Hindi version of the scale (TAS-20-H) showed excellent cross-language equivalence with the English version. In addition, the TAS-20-H demonstrated adequate internal consistency, good test-retest reliability, and a three-factor structure consistent with the three-factor model of the original scale.


Personality and Individual Differences | 1996

Eysenckian personality dimensions and alexithymia: Examining the overlap in terms of perceived autonomic arousal

Rakesh Pandey; Manas K. Mandal

Abstract The inter-relationships of alexithymia, Eysenckian personality dimensions, and perceived autonomic arousal were examined ( N = 200). Alexithymia correlated positively with neuroticism and perceived autonomic arousal. Extraversion correlated negatively with alexithymia, and only sociability contributed to this negative relationship. Tendency to focus on autonomic arousal (i.e. perceived arousal) was found to be a potential variable for explaining the overlap between alexithymia and Eysenckian personality dimensions. The possibility that alexithymia is a personality construct associated with autonomic arousal has been discussed.


The Journal of Psychology | 1996

CEREBRAL LATERALITY IN AFFECT AND AFFECTIVE ILLNESS : A REVIEW

Manas K. Mandal; Hari S. Asthana; Rakesh Pandey; Suptendra Sarbadhikari

It is generally claimed that affect processing is a right hemisphere function. It is also claimed that right hemisphere dysfunction is characteristic of depressive illness. These claims are not accepted without controversy, and it has been found that the relationship between affect processing and affective illness in terms of intra- and interhemispheric role is not straightforward. Two types of studies were reviewed in this context: behavioral and electrophysiological. Potential confounding effects are discussed.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 1996

Bilateral transfer deficit in schizophrenia: a trait marker

A.K Biswas; S Haque-Nizamie; Rakesh Pandey; Manas K. Mandal

Schizophrenic patients who had shown improvement over a 6-week treatment period were tested for their bilateral transfer of skill with a mirror-drawing task. Compared with first degree relatives and normal control subjects, patients showed a significant deficit in bilateral transfer of skills in terms of response accuracy both before and after treatment. These findings indicate that the deficit is an enduring functional loss in schizophrenia.


Behavioural Neurology | 1992

Hemifacial Display of Emotion in the Resting State

Manas K. Mandal; Hari S. Asthana; S. K. Madan; Rakesh Pandey

The human face at rest displays distinguishable asymmetries with some lateralization of emotion or expression. The asymmetrical nature of the resting face was examined by preparing hemifacial composites, left-left, right-right, along with normal facial orientation. The left side and right side composites were constructed by using the lateral half of one side of the face and its mirror-reversal. The left side facial composites were found to be more emotional than the right side or normal facial orientations of neutral expressions.


Industrial Psychiatry Journal | 2012

Individual differences in hemispheric preference and emotion regulation difficulties

Garima Gupta; Akanksha Dubey; Prachi Saxena; Rakesh Pandey

Background: Hemisphericity or individual difference in the preference to use the left or the right hemispheric mode of information processing has been associated with various emotion-related differences. For example, the right hemisphericity has been linked with inhibition of emotional expression, feeling of tension, greater impulsivity etc. These observations suggest that right hemisphericity may be associated with greater difficulties in regulating emotions. However, direct empirical tests of such theoretical proposition are very thin. Aim: In view of this, the present study aims to investigate how and to what extent individual difference in hemispheric preference relate to emotion regulation. Materials and Methods: Thirty-two right-handed male subjects in the age range 18 to 20 years were assessed on self-report measures of hemispheric preference and emotion regulation difficulties. The correlation between dimensions of hemispheric preference and difficulties in regulating emotions was computed. A series of stepwise multiple regression analyses were also done to explore the relative significance of various dimensions of hemispheric preference in predicting emotion regulation difficulties. Results: The findings revealed that in general a preference for the right hemispheric mode of information processing was associated with greater emotion regulation difficulties. The correlation analysis indicated that while impulse control difficulties and difficulties in engaging goal directed behavior was associated with preference for almost all the right hemispheric mode of information processing, the nonacceptance of emotional responses and limited access to emotion regulation was related to preference for only global/synthetic (a right hemispheric) mode of information processing. Similarly, the lack of emotional clarity facet of emotion regulation difficulties correlated significantly with a preference for the emotional mode of information processing (again a right hemispheric mode). The results of stepwise multiple regression analyses, however, indicated that “nonacceptance of emotional responses’ and ‘limited access to emotion regulation strategies” facets of emotion regulation difficulties were best predicted by a preference for the global/synthetic mode of information processing. While others like difficulties engaging in goal-directed behaviour, impulse control difficulties, and lack of emotional clarity were best predicted by a preference for visuo-spatial rather than the verbal mode of information processing. Conclusion: Overall, the findings imply that greater preference for right hemispheric mode of information processing as compared to the left is associated with greater difficulties in regulating emotions.


Journal of Basic Microbiology | 1982

Spore differentiation in relation to certain antibiotics in the blue-green alga Nodularia spumigena MERTENS

Rakesh Pandey; E. R. S. Talpasayi

Induction of spore differentiation is achieved within three days in Nodularia spumigena by incubating the cultures at 35 degrees C in the light. Morphologically detectable sporulation and spore germination could not occur in the presence of chloramphenicol, streptomycin and penicillin. But chloramphenicol-supplemented cultures developed prominent cyanophycin granules. Synthesis of these granules seems to be a non-ribosomal phenomenon.


The Journal of Psychology | 1995

Asymmetry in emotional face: its role in intensity of expression.

Manas K. Mandal; Hari S. Asthana; Rakesh Pandey

Normal subjects rated expressiveness of two posed facial emotions, happy and sad; the photographs were stratified in terms of intensity of expression and were prepared in composite (right-right, left-left), normal, and mirror-reversed facial orientations. The left side of the face was more expressive for intermediate intensity expressions of happiness and for least intense expressions of happiness and sadness. The right side of the face was more expressive for most intense expressions of happiness and sadness.


Journal of General Psychology | 1992

Exposed eye area (EEA) in the expression of various emotions.

Manas K. Mandal; Rakesh Pandey; Sanjay K. Madan

Exposed eye area (EEA) was measured in photographs of Indian adults who modeled six emotions--happiness, sadness, fear, anger, surprise, and disgust--as well as a neutral expression. The data were analyzed with a 2 x 6 (Eyes x Emotions) factorial analysis of covariance (ANCOVA). EEA for neutral expression was used as the covariate measure. The EEAs of the two eyes did not differ significantly during the expression of emotion. The EEAs for fear and surprise were significantly larger, and the EEA for disgust was significantly smaller than those for either other emotions or neutral expression.


Psychology & Health | 2018

Poor emotional responsiveness in clinical hypertension: Reduced accuracy in the labelling and matching of emotional faces amongst individuals with hypertension and prehypertension

Meenakshi Shukla; Rakesh Pandey; Dharmendra Jain; Jennifer Y. F. Lau

Psychological factors are known to play an important part in the origin of many medical conditions including hypertension. Recent studies have reported elevated blood pressure (even in the normal range of variation) to be associated with a reduced responsiveness to emotions or ‘emotional dampening’. Our aim was to assess emotional dampening in individuals with more extreme blood pressure levels including prehypertensives (N = 58) and hypertensives (N = 60) by comparing their emotion recognition ability with normotensives (N = 57). Participants completed novel facial emotion matching and facial emotion labelling tasks following blood pressure measurement and their accuracy of emotion recognition and average response times were compared. The normotensives demonstrated a significantly higher accuracy of emotion recognition than the prehypertensives and the hypertensives in labelling of facial emotions. This difference generalised to the task where two facial halves (upper & lower) had to be matched on the basis of emotions. In neither the labelling nor matching emotion conditions did the groups differ in their speed of emotion processing. Findings of the present study extend reports of ‘emotional dampening’ to hypertensives as well as to those at-risk for developing hypertension (i.e. prehypertensives) and have important implications for understanding the psychological component of such medical conditions as hypertension.

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Manas K. Mandal

Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur

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Prachi Saxena

Banaras Hindu University

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Akanksha Dubey

Banaras Hindu University

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Garima Gupta

Banaras Hindu University

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A.K Biswas

Central Institute of Psychiatry

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