The most recent application is to detect a rise in cortisol levels when the person is becoming stressed
as an anxiety alert.
Not exact matches
Anxiety as flour - fine
as sand from Aram fills ours hearts
as we watch dense cloud ziggurats grow tall above the land, and weather warnings in cuneiform
alert us of a coming thunderstorm.
They appear not to wake up
as much next to their mothers but actually in terms of small arousals and even larger ones they wake up more, but they do not necessarily
alert the mother because they sense their own safety (or whatever emotion or physical sense that reduces stress or
anxiety) which comes with smelling her milk and feeling her body, hearing her breadth and feeling her movements and rhythms.
But
as a parent, you need to be
alert and identify the signs and symptoms of
anxiety in children.
In addition, there are service dogs that assist with invisible disabilities, such
as diabetes and
anxiety,
alerting a person of a physiological change.
Medical Alert / Medical Response —
Alerts to oncoming medical conditions, such
as heart attack, stroke, diabetes, epilepsy, panic attack,
anxiety attack, post traumatic stress disorder.
Delilah serves
as his therapy dog,
alerting the family to upcoming seizures, comforting Zach and helping him overcome his social
anxiety and tendency not to speak.
Other debatable trained
alerts include migraine,
anxiety (in response to spiking cortisol not dropping
as seen in Addison's Disease), blood pressure changes, heart rate changes, and more.
Specially - trained dogs can help reduce the
anxiety of a person with Alzheimer's, aid those who are blind or deaf,
alert people with epilepsy of a pending seizure, or help those with issues such
as Autism Spectrum Disorder or agoraphobia to focus and connect with others.
Things that weren't issues before may become so, such
as separation
anxiety (even to the point of being anxious at night because you're asleep and not
alert to them), visitors entering the home, interacting with new dogs, new noise phobias or simply acting more irritated or agitated than usual.
As in other noise aversion studies (Landsberg et al., 2015; Gruen et al., 2015), some dogs showed active
anxiety behaviors (pacing, panting, excessive self - directed licking) in response to the distressing noise stimuli, whereas others became very still but
alert when exposed to the same noises.
For instance, it may help someone with a mobility problem, visual or hearing impairment, epilepsy (
alerting to seizures), diabetes (
alerting to high or low blood sugar), an
anxiety disorder or a developmental disorder such
as autism.
The introduction of stationary bicycles is part of a broader discussion among educators about «self - regulation» in the classroom, defined loosely
as «your own ability to calm yourself and understand your
anxiety so that you can reset your situation in order to become calm,
alert, and ready to learn.»