While stress has become a consistent part of modern - day life, excessive amounts of it can trigger illnesses by
causing changes in behaviour and physiology.
Toxoplasmosis not only causes sheep to abort, but can
cause changes in behaviour in some infected animals.
You must be wondering what on earth has
caused the change in his behaviour.
Not exact matches
It is impossible to make forecasts because we don't know the
change in behaviour that this could
cause in the manufacturing sector or
in Canada, given that they could find other markets, other value chains elsewhere
in the world that do not involve the United States.
Deluded manager plus greedy board has created a crisis at arsenal with third rate players being paid first rate wages to keep them loyal and drugged up fans like yourself overdosing on 4th place high... True fans want
change when they see the club going
in wrong direction not a string of drug crazed platitudes from tribal loyalists who are so deluded themselves that they actually believe the blame for the crisis lies with the people who have been pointing to its
causes... Do you think financial crises only happen because people start warning about overlevaraged banks, the speculative and fraudulent
behaviour of their overpaid employees and the indulgence of their massively overpaid senior management... Pathetic comment
not really making the news, the atmosphere on last wednesday was really strange, silent, step by step to normal football, but you can't throw away your thoughts immediately, I just got a glimpse of Enkes personality during a film of him shown before the match, I can't realize how hard it must be for his wife to lose him, tomorrow the players of Germans first Bundesliga will wear a black ribbon again, but I think it won't affect the atmosphere like it has with the national team despite of Hannover of course, people will be enthousiastic again, but there is the idea of an «Enke donation» which I like, will keep his name alive, will take some positive emotions on this tragedy and a kind of appeal for everyone to reflect the important things of life and control your own
behaviour, I hope so at least, and I hope his wife will cope with that situation, and again: it was really hard for the German nationl team to play under these circumstances, to lose someone close
in this way is hard to deal with, on the other hand it
causes a close solidarity feeling I think, but of course the world will not
change, things are returning to the old soon, but nonetheless for me this tragedy is a kind of human wake - up call, at least a call and then you continue
«It is my view that Lord Rennard ought to reflect upon the effect that his
behaviour has had and the distress which it
caused and that an apology would be appropriate, as would a commitment to
change his
behaviour in future.»
In addition to the damage that can be
caused to an individual animal, «the presence of lead indirectly impacts upon the Griffon vulture population due to
changes to bird
behaviour, reduced reproductive success and lower immunological response,» the researcher concludes.
However, Professor Stewart believes that over a few millennia those sea level rises could have
caused the fault system beneath and around Mount Etna to completely
change in behaviour, sealing up old lava flows and ultimately forcing them to emerge elsewhere on the island.
For these researchers, the bursts of demographic expansion
caused by climate
change in southern Africa were probably key factors
in the origin of modern humans»
behaviour in Africa, and
in the dispersal of Homo sapiens from his ancestral home.
Frontotemporal dementia is a form of dementia that
causes changes in personality and
behaviour, and language difficulties.
A bad microbiome is unlikely to «
cause» ASD like
behaviour unless the brain is also affected
in development to be susceptible to the
changes in peripheral neural information arriving from the gut and other places.
«Furthermore, the paper looks at the mutational pattern
in general and concludes that few of the evolutionary
changes seem to be
in places
in the Zika genome that would
cause much consequent alteration
in the virus's
behaviour.
But once you are healing the phases
in between the die offs get bigger and you are better able to judge what is
causing you to feel worse and
change your
behaviour accordingly.
As well, some of the duplicitous
behaviour noted above by authors trying to game the system, has
caused a backlash from Amazon
in the form of review policy
changes and even deleted reviews.
Chapter 12 — Implications for Investors # 3 —
Change Your Trading
Behaviour In this chapter we look at what it is exactly that the average investors does that
causes him or her to fail to beat the market, even when you ignore costs.
This can be complicated by the fact that a cat's
behaviour can
change if it is stressed — this could be
caused by another cat living
in the house or cats outside; difficulty
in dealing with other things it finds stressful such as children or noise.
Urinary tract problems can
cause immediate
changes in the
behaviour of your cat,
causing it to be
in constant pain.
In any situations where a dogs
behaviour changes or becomes and issue, first have a vet check the dog to make sure the
cause is not something physical.
Protective and guarding
behaviours may include frequent
changes in body position
in order to find the position that
causes the least discomfort, as well as reluctance to use the painful body part with resulting abnormal posture or unusual gait.
Where dogs have
behaviours which owners find unacceptable, such as aggression or destruction, qualified behaviourists achieve long term
changes in behaviour through the use of established and validated techniques of
behaviour modification without subjecting dogs to training techniques which may
cause pain or distress.
Scientists agree that a doubling of atmospheric CO2 levels could result
in temperature increases of between 1.5 and 4.5 °C,
caused by rapid
changes such as snow and ice melt, and the
behaviour of clouds and water vapour.
Molecular
change to chemicals at low pH is the primary
cause of impaired olfactory - mediated
behaviour of fishes
in freshwater conditions.
Global warming may
change ape
behaviour, which
in turn could
cause them to run «out of time», reveals a study.
Scientists believe that this
behaviour is related to
changes in the way the oceans store and transport heat, although the precise
causes of these
changes are not always clear.
This widespread equipment
change caused an artificial cooling
in the record due to differences
in the
behaviour of the sensors and the sheltering of the instruments.
Favourite plays include hyper - focus on one, extremely speculative study (T&S 09); misrepresenting the potential for abrupt cooling
in the C21st, dismissing the dominance of the centennial forced trend, misrepresenting deglacial abrupt climate
change; grossly over-stating the accuracy and utility of pre-CERES TOA reconstructions (especially the synthetic, non-observational ISCCP - FD reconstruction); hyper - focus on interannual OHC variability; confusion of
cause and effect with long - term trends
in OHC (CO2 forcing denial) and general inability to see that natural variability from now on will be riding up a forced trend which will increasingly dominate climate
behaviour.
Unpredictable and extreme weather conditions, combined with hotter, drier summers and wetter winters, were
causing changes in the distribution and
behaviour of some species, such as the hazel dormouse, the study finds.
If the
behaviour of recent temperature
change is to be understood, and the mechanisms and
causes correctly attributed, parallel efforts are needed to reconstruct the longer and more widespread pre-instrumental history of climate variability, as well as the detailed
changes in various factors that might influence climate (Bradley et al., 2003b; Jones and Mann, 2004).
The models (and there are many) have numerous common
behaviours — they all cool following a big volcanic eruption, like that at Mount Pinatubo
in 1991; they all warm as levels of greenhouse gases are increased; they show the same relationships connecting water vapour and temperature that we see
in observations; and they can quantify how the giant lakes left over from the Ice Age may have
caused a rapid cooling across the North Atlantic as they drained and
changed ocean circulation patterns.
They found that
in the last 40 years the amount of discarded plastics has led to a 100-fold rise
in plastic particles
in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre (Great Pacific Garbage Patch) and is
causing creatures like the sea skater (Halobates sericeus) to alter their
behaviour due to
changes in habitat.
It also arises
in cases where the claimant has suffered brain injuries
in an accident which have
caused personality
changes and led to criminal
behaviour.
The effects of this type of injury may not show until 18 months after the incident,
causing changes in physical, mental and cognitive
behaviours.
«Triple P
causes positive
change in parenting skills, child problem
behaviour and parental well - being
in the small to moderate range, varying as a function of the intensity of the intervention» (Nowak & Heinrichs, 2008).
Unlike the present study, Galloway et al. [15] did not control for levels of fussy eating at the first time point, so it is not clear whether the pressuring techniques actually
caused a
change in girls» eating
behaviour over time.
Care and development / Care for others / Care for the caregivers / Care, learning and treatment / Care leavers / Care work / Care workers (1) / Care workers (2) / Care workers (3) / Care workers (4) / Care worker role / Care workers (1983) / Care worker turnover / Caregiver roles / Caregiver's dilemma / Carers (1) / Carers (2) / Carers support groups / Caring / Caring and its discontents / Caring for carers / Caring for children / Caring interaction / Caring relationships / Carpe minutum / Casing /
Cause and behavior /
Causes of stress / Celebrate / Challenging
behaviours / Challenging children and A. S. Neill /
Change (1) /
Change (2) /
Change and child care workers /
Change in world view /
Change theory /
Changing a child's world view /
Changing behaviour / Child, active or passive / Child Advocacy / Child and youth care (1) / Child and youth care (2) / Child and youth care and mental health / Child and youth care education / Child and youth care work unique / Child
behaviour and family functioning / Child care and the organization / Child care workers (1) / Child Care workers (2) / Child care workers (3) / Child care workers: catalysts for a future world / Childcare workers
in Ireland / Child carers / Child health
in foster care / Child
in pain / Child perspective
in FGC / Child saving movement / Child's perspective / Child's play / Child's security / Children and power / Children and television / Children
in care / Children
in state care / Children of alcoholics (1) / Children of alcoholics (2) / Children today / Children who hate (1) / Children who hate (2) / Children who hate (3) / Children who were
in care / Children whose defenses work overtime / Children's ability to give consent / Children's emotions / Children's feelings / Children's grief / Children's homes / Children's homes
in UK / Children's rights (1) / Children's rights (2) / Children's rights (3) / Children's stress / Children's views (1) / Children's views (2) / Children's views on smacking / Children's voices / Children's work and child labour / Choices
in caring / Choices for youth / Circular effect behavior / Clare Winnicott / Class teacher / Classroom meetings / Clear thought / Client self - determination / Clinical application of humour / Coaching approach / Coercion / Coercion and compliance (1) / Coercion and compliance (2) / Cognitive - behavioral interventions and anger / Cognitive skills / Collaboration / Commissioner for children / Commitment to care / Common needs / Common profession?
/ School restorative conferencing / School restorative conferencing / School setting / Schools / School's contribution / Secure accommodation (1) / Secure accommodation (2) / Self / Self awareness for facilitators / Self
in family work / Self - blame / Self - development / Self exposed / Self - expressions / Self formation / Self - injury (1) / Self - injury (2) / Self - injury (3) / Self - mutilation / Self - mutilation: an examination of a growing phenomenon / Self renewal / Self - supervision (1) / Self - supervision (2) / Selfishness / altruism / Separation and Loss / Separations / Service user involvement / Severe personality disorder / Sex education / Sexual abuse / Sexual abuse
in an institutional setting / Sexual abuse recovery work / Shaping modifying environments / Sharing and bearing with a child / Showing that life can be enjoyable / Significant adults / Significant learning / Silence / Silent voices / Single
cause / Size of residential settings / Sleep / Small group living / Small groups / Social brain (The) / Social care
in Ireland / Social care — the field / Social
change / Social competence (1) / Social competence (2) / Social Competencies: Affect / Social networks
in restricted settings / Social Pedagogy / Social policy / Social skills training (1) / Social skills training (2) / Social skills training (3) / Social skills training (4) / Social skills training (5) / Socratic questioning / Solution - focused principles / Some unanswered questions / Space and place / Space under threat / Spaces / Spatial arrangements / Special considerations
in the development process / Spiritual connection / Spiritual well - being / Spirituality / St. John Bosco / Staff and sexual orientation / Staff induction / Staff integrity / Staff meeting / Staff morale / Staff morale
in children's homes / Staff retention / Staff selection / Staff support / Staff training groups
in institutions / Staff turnover / Staff values and discipline / Staffing / Statement of Purpose / Status of care workers / Stealing / Steering a middle course / Stigma / Story, time, motion, place / Story unfolding / Storybook reading / Street children (1) / Street children (2) / Street children (3) / Street children (4) / Street children (5) / Street children (6) / Street children and self - determination / Street corner / Street kids / Street youth and prostitution / Streetsmart kids / Stress / Stress
in child care work / Strengths (1) / Strengths (2) / Strengths (3) / Structure of activities / Structured storying / Structuring the relationship / Stuck clients / Students / Students, self and practice / Succeeding with at - risk youth / Successful careers / Suicidal
behaviour in GLB youth / Suicide (1) / Suicide (2) / Suicide attempts / Suicide risk / Suitability for practice / Supervision (1) / Supervision (2) / Supervision (3) / Supervision (4) / Supervision (5) / Supervision (6) / Supervision (7) / Supervision (8) / Supervision (9) / Supervision and ethics / Supervision and practice / Supervision and teaching / Supervision formats / Supervision: Parallel process / Supervision wish list / Supervisor insecurity / Support for self - harm / Support for self - harm / Symbolic communication / Symptom tolerance guaranteed / Systemic thinking / Systems (1) / Systems (2) / Systems (3) / Systems and spheres of influence / Systems thinking / Systems vs developmental views /
And when I asked about what
changed with KidsMatter what educators reported was that
in fact that children were more settled, they were enjoying their work more, they were able to understand the
causes of children's
behaviour and so they were really able to respond more effectively and
in a calm and supportive way.