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Dive into the research topics where Yong Peng Why is active.

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Featured researches published by Yong Peng Why.


Psychology & Health | 2005

Anger, stress, coping, social support and health: Modelling the relationships

Siew Maan Diong; George D. Bishop; Hwee Chong Enkelmann; Eddie M. W. Tong; Yong Peng Why; Jansen C.H. Ang; Majeed Khader

Two studies examined the interrelationships of anger, the experience of stress, perceived social support, and coping strategies along with their relationship to health using structural equation modelling (SEM). Results showed dispositional anger to be composed of two factors, anger experience and anger control. Higher levels of anger experience were related directly to higher levels of stress and lower levels of perceived support resources, indirectly to greater use of avoidance coping, and both directly and indirectly to lower psychological well-being and greater psychological distress. Psychological distress was, in turn, related to poorer physical health. By contrast, higher levels of anger control were associated with a greater tendency to engage in active and reappraisal coping and lower use of avoidance coping. Active and reappraisal coping were, in turn, related to better psychological and physical health whereas the opposite was true for avoidance coping.


Journal of Occupational Health Psychology | 2003

Job demands, decisional control, and cardiovascular responses.

George D. Bishop; Hwee Chong Enkelmann; Eddie M. W. Tong; Yong Peng Why; Siew Maan Diong; Jansen Ang; Majeed Khader

The demand-control model for coronary heart disease was tested using ambulatory blood pressure monitoring. Male patrol officers (N = 118) wore ambulatory blood pressure monitors during 1 of their day shifts with readings taken every 30 min. Following each reading, officers completed a questionnaire using a handheld computer. Significant interactions were obtained between job demands and decisional control for heart rate and pressure rate product such that both variables were highest under conditions of high demand and low control. Main effects were obtained for control such that diastolic blood pressure and mean arterial pressure were significantly higher under conditions of low control. These results support the demand-control model and emphasize the importance of psychological control in cardiovascular responses.


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 2009

The effects of Neuroticism and Extraversion on cardiovascular reactivity during a mental and an emotional stress task

C.R. Jonassaint; Yong Peng Why; George D. Bishop; Eddie M. W. Tong; Siew Maan Diong; Hwee Chong Enkelmann; Majeed Khader; Jansen C.H. Ang

UNLABELLED Evidence suggests that physiological reactivity to mental and emotional stress may be influenced by personality traits. OBJECTIVES This study aimed to examine the relationship between, emotionally based personality traits, Neuroticism (N) and Extraversion (E), and cardiovascular reactivity (CVR) during mental arithmetic (MA) and anger recall (AR). METHODS Heart rate, blood pressure, cardiac output and total peripheral resistance were measured in 114 Singaporean male patrol officers from the Singapore Police Force while they performed MA and AR tasks. N and E were assessed using the NEO PI-R. RESULTS Higher N was associated with lower DBP and TPRI reactivity during MA as compared to lower N, but higher TPRI reactivity during AR. Lower E scores were associated with heightened CVR while higher E scores were associated with lower CVR. For SBP and HR, E was associated with a reduction in reactivity across tasks; whereas, for DBP and TPRI this reduction was found only during AR. CONCLUSION In this population, N had differential effects on CVR depending upon the nature of the stress task, cognitive or emotional. However, higher E was consistently linked to lower CVR during stress tasks and appeared to influence how individuals express and cope with anger.


Cognition & Emotion | 2007

Emotion and appraisal: A study using ecological momentary assessment

Eddie M. W. Tong; George D. Bishop; Hwee Chong Enkelmann; Yong Peng Why; Siew Maan Diong; Majeed Khader; Jansen Ang

This study employed Ecological Momentary Assessment to test predictions from appraisal theories of emotion about the relationships between emotions and appraisals, using a sample of police officers from Singapore. Strong support was obtained for the predictions, thus demonstrating ecological validity of appraisal theories while circumventing shortcomings of previously used methods in appraisal studies. The results also indicate that the emotions were accounted for by specific configurations of appraisals over and above those accounted for by individual constituent appraisals.


Personality and Individual Differences | 2004

Social support and personality among male police officers in Singapore.

Eddie M. W. Tong; George D. Bishop; Siew Maan Diong; Hwee Chong Enkelmann; Yong Peng Why; Jansen Ang; Majeed Khader

This study examines the relationship between perceived social support and personality among police officers from Singapores three main ethnic groups, Chinese, Indians, and Malays. Perceived social support was measured by the short version of the Social Support Questionnaire [SSQ: Sarason, Sarason, Shearin, & Pierce (1987) and personality was assessed by the NEO PI-R. Of the three ethnic groups Chinese participants reported the largest number of social supports but the lowest satisfaction with that support. Regression analyses revealed that none of the NEO PI-R domains stood out as independent predictors of Satisfaction with Social Support (SSS) whereas Agreeableness, Extraversion, and Openness contributed independently to Number of Social Supports (SSN). In addition, SSN was divided into two components: Number of Social Supports from Family (SSN-fm) and Number of Social Supports from Others (SSN-o). Regression analyses showed Agreeableness and Conscientiousness to be independent predictors of SSN-fm and Conscientiousness, Extraversion, and Openness to be independent predictors of SSN-o. In addition, the relationships were found to be equally descriptive of the three ethnic groups. These results are discussed in terms of their theoretical and practical implications.


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 2003

Cardiovascular reactivity of Singaporean male police officers as a function of task, ethnicity and hostility

Yong Peng Why; George D. Bishop; Eddie M. W. Tong; Siew Maan Diong; Hwee Chong Enkelmann; Majeed Khader; Jansen Ang

OBJECTIVE This research examined hemodynamic processes in cardiovascular reactivity (CVR) as a function of task, ethnicity and trait hostility. METHOD One hundred and fourteen male patrol officers from the Singapore Police Force participated in this experimental study. Trait hostility was measured using the interpersonal hostility assessment technique to derive a hostile behavior index (HBI). Heart rate, blood pressure and hemodynamic measures were taken while participants performed three tasks: mental arithmetic, number reading and anger recall (AR). RESULTS AR elicited the greatest blood pressure, vascular and cardiac output reactivity. HBI scores were positively related to systolic blood pressure reactivity during AR for Malays whereas this was not true for Indians and Chinese. Across tasks Indians with high HBI scores appeared to be cardiac reactors whereas the reactivity patterns for Malays and Chinese were undifferentiated. Self-report of negative mood was not related to CVR. CONCLUSION These results are consistent with the higher rates of coronary heart disease deaths among Indians as well as the higher rates for hypertension among Malays in Singapore.


Emotion | 2005

The use of ecological momentary assessment to test appraisal theories of emotion.

Eddie M. W. Tong; George D. Bishop; Hwee Chong Enkelmann; Yong Peng Why; Siew Maan Diong; Majeed Khader; Jansen Ang

Although appraisal theories have received strong empirical support, there are methodological concerns about the research, including biased recall, heuristic responding, ethical issues, and weak and unrealistic induction of emotions in laboratories. To provide a more ecologically valid test of appraisal theories, the authors used ecological momentary assessment, in which the emotions and appraisals of Singaporean police officers were measured online over the course of an ordinary workday. The research focused on happiness. Support was obtained for predictions, demonstrating the generalizability of appraisal theories to a nonlaboratory setting and circumventing the shortcomings of previously used methodologies. Also, evidence was obtained that happiness was reported primarily in association with a specific combination of 3 relevant appraisals: high pleasantness, high perceived control, and low moral violation.


Basic and Applied Social Psychology | 2009

Emotion and Appraisal Profiles of the Needs for Competence and Relatedness

Eddie M. W. Tong; George D. Bishop; Hwee Chong Enkelmann; Siew Maan Diong; Yong Peng Why; Majeed Khader; Jansen Ang

This study examined the emotion and appraisal correlates of the needs for Competence and Relatedness. Using experience-sampling, fluctuations of competence and relatedness throughout a days period were found to correspond to fluctuations in emotions and appraisals in ways theoretically consistent with the self-determination theory (Deci & Ryan, 2000). Each need was related in specific ways to the six emotions examined (anger, sadness, fear, guilt, shame, and joy) and, more interesting, was characterized by a specific appraisal-profile. Implications of these findings for needs processes are discussed.


conference on multimedia modeling | 2011

Shape stylized face caricatures

Nguyen Kim Hai Le; Yong Peng Why; Golam Ashraf

Facial caricatures exaggerate key features to emphasize unique structural and personality traits. It is quite a challenge to retain the identity of the original person despite the exaggerations. We find that primitive shapes are well known for representing certain personality traits, in art and psychology literature. Unfortunately, current automated caricature generation techniques ignore the role of primitive shapes in stylization. These methods are limited to emphasizing key distances from a fixed Golden Ratio, or computing the best mapping in a proprietary example set of (real-image, cartoon portrait) pairs. We propose a novel stylization algorithm that allows expressive vector control with primitive shapes. We propose three shape-inspired ideas for caricature generation from input frontal face portraits: 1) Extrapolation in the Golden Ratio and Primitive Shape Spaces; 2) Use of art and psychology stereotype rules; 3) Constrained adaptation to a supplied cartoon mask. We adopt a recent mesh-less parametric image warp algorithm for the hair, face and facial features (eyes, mouth, eyebrows, nose, and ears) that provides fast results. The user can synthesize a range of caricatures by changing the number of identity constraints, relaxing shape change constraints, and controlling a global exaggeration scaling factor. Different cartoon templates and art rules can make the persons caricature mimic different personalities, and yet retain basic identity. The proposed method is easy to use and implement, and can be extended to create animated facial caricatures for games, film and interactive media applications.


computer games | 2010

Mining Human Shape Perception with Role Playing Games

Golam Ashraf; Yong Peng Why; Md. Tanvirul Islam

‘Games with a purpose’ is a paradigm where games are designed to computationally capture the essence of the underlying collective human conscience or commonsense that plays a major role in decision-making. This human computing method ensures spontaneous participation of players who, as a byproduct of playing, provide useful data that is impossible to generate computationally and extremely difficult to collect through extensive surveys. In this paper we describe a game that allows us to collect data on human perception of character body shapes. The paper describes the experimental setup, related game design constraints, art creation, and data analysis. In our interactive roleplaying detective game titled Villain Ville, players are asked to characterize different versions of full-body color portraits of three villain characters. They are later supposed to correctly match their character-trait ratings to a set of characters represented only with outlines of primitive vector shapes. By transferring human intelligence tasks into core game-play mechanics, we have successfully managed to collect motivated data. Preliminary analysis on game data generated by 50 secondary school students shows a convergence to some common perception associations between role, physicality and personality. We hope to harness this game to discover perception for a wide variety of body-shapes to build up an intelligent shape-trait-role model, with application in tutored drawing, procedural character geometry creation and intelligent retrieval.

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Eddie M. W. Tong

National University of Singapore

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George D. Bishop

National University of Singapore

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Hwee Chong Enkelmann

National University of Singapore

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Siew Maan Diong

National University of Singapore

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Golam Ashraf

National University of Singapore

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Md. Tanvirul Islam

National University of Singapore

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Raymond Zhiwei Huang

National University of Singapore

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Kaiser Md. Nahiduzzaman

National University of Singapore

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Chin Leong Lim

National University of Singapore

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David Koh

National University of Singapore

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